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Abiola Aderibigbe: Anchoring Justice, Leading with Integrity

There was a time when Abiola Aderibigbe could have been content resolving legal disputes or drafting meticulous contracts. But that was never enough. He believed the law should be more than a shield it should be a framework for justice, a platform for empowerment, a way to help institutions live out their values more fully. That belief led him to PSJ UK, where he now serves as General Counsel, Chief Operating Officer, and Board Secretary.

At PSJ UK, Abiola stands at a powerful crossroads where law meets mission, where compliance meets compassion. Each day, he works hand-in-hand with trustees, executive management, external counsel, and operational teams to ensure that the organisation’s legal posture does more than manage risk. It enables impact. It protects people, yes but also honours them.

His vision of leadership is rooted in sustainability not just of systems and structures, but of the human spirit. He makes time for reflective solitude, takes walks in nature, and stays grounded in the belief that mental wellbeing is not a luxury, but a necessity. These moments of stillness help him lead with clarity and purpose.

Abiola believes the strongest governance is transparent and ethical. He works to build environments where volunteers, staff and partners feel not only safe to raise concerns but motivated to understand the “why” behind policies. For him, legal work is not just about what an organisation can do it’s about what it should do.

In every process, every decision, every document, Abiola brings the same conviction: that the law should reflect the dignity of the people it serves. And at PSJ UK, he’s helping to build a structure that does just that.

A LEGAL CAREER ROOTED IN JUSTICE AND TRANSFORMATION

From as early as six years old, Abiola was captivated by the idea that the law could be both a shield for the vulnerable and a lever for systemic change. Growing up between Nigeria and the United Kingdom, and later practising law in the UK, he witnessed first-hand how legal frameworks when applied with integrity could uphold justice, but when misused or neglected, could also enable its erosion. This contrast didn’t merely spark his interest in the law; it solidified his commitment to using it as a tool for societal good.

Abiola’s background has profoundly shaped his global legal leadership. Born in Nigeria, educated and trained in the UK, and having served in legal roles which required cross-jurisdictional collaboration across the UK, Europe, Middle East and Africa, he brings a rare cross-jurisdictional perspective to his work. His ability to navigate not only legal systems, but also the cultural and political dynamics that underpin them, has become a defining feature of his leadership style.

From the outset of his career, Abiola has straddled both private sector commercial practice and public interest legal work a duality that has become one of his greatest strengths. He combines legal precision with a deep sense of empathy, ensuring that legal strategies align with both corporate goals and societal needs. His roles at Mott MacDonald, Yondr Group, and Irwin Mitchell have equipped him with the commercial acumen necessary for high-stakes legal leadership, while his work with purpose-driven organisations such as PSJ UK and How to Change the World reflects his unwavering commitment to justice and impact.

Abiola’s experience spans a wide range of sectors including construction, infrastructure, energy, social care, and human rights broadening his lens on leadership and governance. Whether advising on cross-border infrastructure projects or building international legal partnerships, he prioritises clarity, collaboration, and culturally intelligent risk management. For him, global legal leadership is not about imposing frameworks but about building consensus aligning principles across borders while respecting local nuance.

He believes that good legal leadership is ethical leadership. Whether drafting governance models for humanitarian organisations, negotiating PPPs in Nigeria, or guiding compliance at PSJ UK, Abiola leads through integrity, active listening, and a deep respect for the people and systems he serves.

Abiola began his legal career in 2013 after completing his law degree, starting out as a paralegal. In those early years, he worked across boutique law firms, international consultancies, and large commercial practices, honing his expertise in litigation, dispute resolution, and commercial law. At Mott MacDonald, he managed cross-border disputes and recovered over £480,000 in outstanding debt across 21 jurisdictions. At Irwin Mitchell, he played a key role in development finance and complex construction litigation involving major financial institutions and developers. These experiences sharpened his ability to operate within complex, multidisciplinary environments.

In 2019, he qualified as a solicitor in England and Wales. By that time, Abiola had come to see the law not just as a set of rules, but as a living framework one that must be wielded with purpose, intention, and humanity. He has carried that philosophy into every boardroom and advisory table since, consistently using the law as a vehicle for equity, resilience, and transformation.

Ultimately, it is the intersection of law and impact that has inspired his journey. Abiola has never been content with simply resolving disputes or drafting contracts. His mission has always been to build legal structures that improve lives, strengthen institutions, and uplift communities. Whether advising on social care innovation in Africa, embedding ethics into infrastructure development, or advancing justice in mission-driven organisations, he continues to use the law as a force for dignity, empowerment, and meaningful change.

GOVERNANCE IN ACTION

Abiola occupies a uniquely strategic position operating at the intersection of law, governance, operations, and mission delivery. His work is both intellectually rigorous and deeply mission-driven, enabling him to steer the organisation’s legal and operational structures in ways that are protective, empowering, and aligned with PSJ UK’s global mandate for peacebuilding, justice advocacy, and social transformation.

As General Counsel, Abiola oversees the charity’s entire legal function, navigating complex legal terrain that includes contract negotiation, risk advisory, safeguarding compliance, and multi-jurisdictional legal frameworks. His work often intersects with areas of human rights, charitable law, and cross-border partnerships. Collaborating with trustees, external counsel, and internal teams, he ensures that PSJ UK’s legal posture not only mitigates risk but actively facilitates the high-impact delivery of its programmes.

In his capacity as Chief Operating Officer, Abiola translates vision into strategy, and strategy into execution. he leads organisational design, partnership structuring, regulatory preparedness, and decision-making across departments. From budgeting and resource optimisation to implementing scalable operational frameworks, his leadership ensures that PSJ UK remains agile, compliant, and outcome-focused positioned for sustainable impact.

As Board Secretary, Abiola serves as the vital link between governance and execution. He provides legal and procedural counsel to the board, ensures regulatory compliance, manages governance documentation, and fosters ethical decision-making at the highest levels. His influence is also embedded into the fabric of the organisation through his role on PSJ UK’s Executive Management Committee (EMC), where he shapes strategic direction, oversees risk, and helps define institutional policy.

At the heart of all these roles lies Abiola’s belief in purposeful legal leadership the conviction that law must serve as a platform for protection, equity, and enduring impact. Whether advising on justice initiatives in West Africa, structuring international data sharing frameworks, or designing internal governance models, he brings a principled, preventive mindset to every decision.

Abiola’s international legal work has taken him across regulatory, cultural, and ethical borders. He has consistently confronted the challenges of regulatory fragmentation, weak enforcement infrastructure, and ethical inconsistency in cross-jurisdictional settings. In regions with variable or underdeveloped legal systems, he has drawn on a combination of diplomacy, cultural sensitivity, and ethical clarity to guide organisations toward coherence and accountability.

One of his ongoing challenges has been aligning UK GDPR compliance with jurisdictions that lack comprehensive data protection laws. Abiola’s solution has been to build internal frameworks that go beyond compliance ensuring ethical stewardship of sensitive information through rigorous protocols and team capacity-building.

He has also addressed the enforceability gaps in international contracts by embedding alternative dispute resolution mechanisms and escalation pathways prioritising collaboration in regions where institutional capacity is limited. His approach is preventive, grounded in legal foresight, and driven by a firm commitment to ethical consistency.

Perhaps most importantly, Abiola recognises that in justice and peacebuilding contexts, legality alone is not enough. The question is not only what is lawful but what is just. In every jurisdiction and every decision, he champions a model of legal leadership that upholds dignity, ensures integrity, and advances PSJ UK’s mission from a position not just of compliance, but of conscience.

LEGAL FORESIGHT AND ETHICAL FOUNDATIONS

For Abiola, the law is not a barrier to innovation it is a framework for principled, sustainable growth. He sits at a vital nexus of compliance, governance, operations, and mission delivery, helping to guide a global peacebuilding organisation through complex legal and ethical terrain. His approach to legal leadership is defined by a core belief: that law must be embedded into strategic decision-making from the outset not as an afterthought or constraint, but as an enabler of trust, legitimacy, and resilient impact.

In this dual role, Abiola plays a critical part in shaping high-stakes decisions across jurisdictions whether PSJ UK is entering a new region, forming strategic partnerships, or launching advocacy in politically sensitive environments. By integrating legal insight early into these processes, he ensures that strategy and compliance evolve together.

His leadership is marked by both precision and pragmatism. While he maintains the highest standards in safeguarding, data protection, and fiduciary accountability, Abiola is equally focused on ensuring that legal standards are operationally workable and contextually appropriate. He understands that effective legal leadership does not hinge on saying “no,” but on asking “how?” how to achieve mission goals ethically, legally, and reputationally. This orientation transforms legal oversight from a gatekeeping function into a strategic asset within the leadership ecosystem.

Abiola’s global legal perspective has taught him to manage ambiguity with ethical clarity navigating the grey zones where law intersects with humanitarian considerations, political dynamics, and moral judgment. In these spaces, he draws on foundational values: fairness, transparency, and integrity. For him, legal compliance is only the starting point; the true test is whether an action aligns with what is right and just.

As Board Secretary, he plays a central role in shaping PSJ UK’s ethical governance. He advises trustees on legal and procedural matters, fosters transparency and accountability, and supports governance decisions that prioritise long-term impact over short-term expediency. His influence ensures that ethical integrity is not a side consideration but a core driver of strategy.

To institutionalise this integrity, Abiola builds systems that make ethics part of everyday decision-making. From conflict-of-interest policies to safeguarding protocols and board frameworks, he ensures that ethical questions are asked at every level. He also works to create organisational cultures where people feel safe to raise concerns, ask difficult questions, and understand the deeper “why” behind compliance structures.

Even in legal grey zones where formal frameworks are absent or unclear Abiola applies principled judgment. He consistently asks: Does this preserve dignity? Does it honour our duty of care? Would we be proud to defend this publicly?

At PSJ UK and beyond, Abiola uses the law not just as a shield from liability, but as a compass for conscience a guiding force for just, transparent, and values-driven leadership in complex international contexts.

BUILDING ETHICAL SYSTEMS FOR SUSTAINABLE IMPACT

Abiola hopes his legacy will be one of legal integrity, institutional courage, and principled transformation. Across every organisation he serves, his goal extends beyond crafting policies or overseeing compliance he aims to embed cultures of trust, ethical leadership, and long-term resilience.

At PSJ UK, this vision means more than meeting regulatory requirements; it means ensuring that the organisation is structurally just. Under his legal and operational leadership, governance is not only transparent and effective, but deeply aligned with the dignity of those the organisation exists to serve. He aspires to be remembered not simply as someone who managed risk, but as someone who helped build systems that empowered others to act with confidence and integrity systems that withstand scrutiny and outlast individual leadership.

Abiola defines his leadership by a commitment to clarity, especially in complex or uncertain environments. Whether shaping safeguarding policies, designing board governance structures, or negotiating contracts, he sees law not just as a protective mechanism, but as a purpose-driven force one that points organisations toward justice, courage, and ethical purpose.

His legacy, he hopes, also includes lifting others. From mentoring junior professionals to empowering internal teams and championing underrepresented voices in legal and governance spaces, he is committed to cultivating leaders who are both capable and principled. If the organisations he leaves behind are stronger, more self-aware, and more resilient because of his presence, he will consider his mission fulfilled.

One of the achievements Abiola is most proud of during his time at PSJ UK is leading the development of a cohesive and future-ready legal and governance framework during a period of strategic expansion. As PSJ UK’s operations grew to include more international partnerships and complex advocacy work, he recognised the need to ensure that its legal infrastructure could scale alongside its ambitions.

He spearheaded efforts to standardise contracts, strengthen safeguarding protocols, align internal policies, and enhance data protection frameworks. In his role as Board Secretary, he also guided the refinement of board governance ensuring that decision-making at the highest level remained not only legally sound but mission-aligned.

What made this achievement especially meaningful to him was its tangible impact. Trustees and staff gained greater confidence in navigating legal and regulatory landscapes, while the organisation became better equipped to engage externally from a position of legal clarity and strength. Though the work was deeply collaborative, shaped by the input of multiple teams, Abiola takes pride in having helped foster a legal culture grounded in integrity and operational confidence.

For him, that’s what true legal leadership looks like: not just protecting the organisation from harm, but helping it thrive by aligning systems with values and values with action.

ANCHORED IN PURPOSE

When Abiola reflects on what it takes to thrive in global legal roles, his advice to aspiring legal professionals is clear and compelling: develop depth, and cultivate range.

He emphasises the importance of a strong legal foundation mastery of core legal principles, clarity of thought, and the ability to balance legal precision with commercial or public purpose. This depth, he notes, forms the bedrock of credibility. It’s what allows legal professionals to lead with authority, negotiate across borders, and offer grounded, strategic advice.

But equally vital, he says, is range the capacity to move fluidly between sectors, legal systems, and cultural contexts. For Abiola, global legal leadership is not about rigidly applying jurisdiction-specific rules; it’s about global legal judgment: being a strategist, a communicator, and most importantly, a listener. Whether navigating regulatory frameworks in West Africa or stakeholder dynamics in the UK, he believes the key lies in context and connection.

He urges young lawyers to stay curious and, above all, stay human. Integrity, empathy, humility, and cultural intelligence, he says, are just as essential as technical skill. The most effective legal professionals he’s encountered are not those who dominate a room, but those who know when to pause, listen, and truly understand before advising.

Above all, Abiola encourages the next generation to remember that law is a tool its true power lies in how it’s used. “Whether you’re in a courtroom, a boardroom, or a refugee camp,” he often says, “ask yourself: Does this legal work reflect my values? Does it make systems stronger, fairer, or more just?” If the answer is yes, then you’re already walking the right path.

Outside of his legal leadership, Abiola finds grounding in simplicity the quiet, restorative moments that offer clarity and perspective. He is passionate about mental wellbeing, reflective solitude, and community impact, whether that means walking in nature, reading something thought-provoking, or volunteering his time for causes close to his heart.

He serves as a trustee for Mind Over Mountains, a charity that combines mental health support with the healing power of nature a mission that deeply resonates with his belief that leadership must be sustainable. For Abiola, sustainability means making space for stillness, gratitude, and perspective in a world that rarely slows down.

Music is another one of his lifelong companions. Playing the piano offers him both rhythm and reflection a practice that mirrors the structured creativity he brings to his legal work. It is, he says, a way to decompress, refocus, and reconnect with what matters.

He also channels his experience into writing and mentorship, two avenues that allow him to share not only legal knowledge, but insights on navigating pressure, finding purpose, and leading with intention. For him, impact isn’t measured by how much you do it’s defined by how deeply you engage with the things that truly matter.

In all things, Abiola lives by the belief that balance is not perfection it’s the practice of anchoring yourself in meaning, so you can lead, serve, and build with clarity, compassion, and courage.