For the first time since the Nigerian Law School opened its doors in 1962, a woman is about to sit at the very top of the institution.
History finally objected to “My Lord” being only that of a male voice in charge of the law school. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the appointment of Dr Olugbemisola Titilayo Odusote as the Director-General of the Nigerian Law School, effective January 10, 2026.
She becomes the first female DG in the school’s 60+ year history and that didn’t happen by accident. Here are five things you should know about the woman rewriting legal history.
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1. Olugbemisola Odusote is Breaking a 63-year-old Bar
Since the Nigerian Law School was established in 1962, the DG role has never been occupied by a woman; until now. Odusote’s appointment officially ends that streak.
2. This is Far From Her First Day on the Job
Odusote isn’t walking in from outside; she’s been inside the system for years. Before this elevation, she served as Deputy Director-General and Head of the Lagos Campus, the busiest, most pressure-filled and some would argue best campus in the system.
She already knows where the pressure points and problems are. This isn’t a “new sheriff in town” story; it’s a “she already knows the town” situation.
3. OAU Raised Her, the UK Refined Her
She earned her LL.B and LL.M from Obafemi Awolowo University, specialising in company and commercial law, and was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1988.
Odusote later bagged a PhD in Law from the University of Surrey, UK, focusing on public law and administration of justice.
4. She’s Risen through the Ranks

She joined the Nigerian Law School in 2001 as a lecturer and steadily worked her way up, serving as Head of Academic Department, Director of Academics, and Head of Campus. If institutional memory were a person, it would probably answer to her name.
5. Olugbemisola Odusote is Academic and Administrative
Odusote has published extensively in reputable local and international law journals, presented papers at major legal education conferences, and served on committees of the Council of Legal Education and the Nigerian Bar Association. As DG, she’ll oversee academic leadership, administration, and strategy across all campuses.
Why Her Appointment Matters
Every Nigerian lawyer passes through the Law School. So, Odusote’s leadership is symbolic. She sets a new tone for representation, continuity, and reform at the heart of legal education.
After 63 years, the gavel has changed hands and history rewritten.
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