A Nigerian-born Legal Practitioner and Child Welfare Specialist, Godwin Aluyor, has emerged as an international advocate for child protection, demanding stronger global accountability in tackling child abuse, exploitation, and labour.
In an interview with journalists in Abuja yesterday, Aluyor said children were the easiest victims and the slowest to heal.
“My life’s mission is to speak where they cannot,” he stated.
A graduate of Benson Idahosa University and a member of the Nigerian Bar, Aluyor built his early career defending vulnerable children through law and public policy.
In Nigeria, he handled cases involving child labour, domestic servitude, and abuse—often representing minors pro bono. He also led legal awareness campaigns, sensitising parents on the Child Rights Act and stressing that child labour is a crime, not culture.
Now based in the United States, Aluyor works within the public sector in Springfield, Illinois, investigating child abuse allegations, supervising family visitations, and preparing reports used in juvenile court proceedings.
“A child should not have to fight twice—once against abuse, and again against a system meant to protect them,” he said, calling for global consistency in child welfare enforcement.
Described by colleagues as a “global defender of children,” Aluyor is credited with reforming reporting systems and improving accountability mechanisms across institutions.
Currently pursuing a Doctor of Public Administration at the University of Illinois, Springfield, Aluyor continues to use his expertise to challenge weak institutions and amplify the voices of abused children.
From combating child labour in Nigeria to safeguarding children in the U.S., Aluyor stands at the intersection of law and compassion—using both as instruments to reshape global child protection.
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