This study critically examines the Nigerian media’s migration coverage, highlighting its disproportionate focus on success narratives that glamorize migration while systematically neglecting the risks, challenges, and failures associated with the migration process. Drawing on Agenda-Setting Theory, Media Ethics, and Postcolonial Media Theory, the research integrates empirical content analysis with first-hand testimonies from migrants including returnees, irregular migrants, documented professionals, and individuals who experienced forced repatriation. The methodology encompassed 50 Nigerian television broadcasts, 100 online news articles, and 200 social media posts published between 2019 and 2024, selected through a stratified sampling framework to ensure representativeness across platforms. Audience reception analysis combined focus groups, social media engagement metrics, and survey data from 400 respondents across Nigeria’s geo-political zones to assess how these narratives influence migration intentions. Findings, illustrated through statistical summaries and visual aids, show that 78% of migration-related stories emphasized positive outcomes, with only 12% addressing risks and 10% adopting a neutral or policy-focused tone. These skewed portrayals persist despite official data indicating that over 8,000 Nigerians were repatriated between 2019 and 2024 and that 15% of migrants returned prematurely. Testimonies reveal the personal costs of underreported realities ranging from labour exploitation in Europe to the emotional toll of family separation. Recommendations include recalibrating editorial policies to ensure balanced reporting, promoting indigenous success stories to counter postcolonial bias, institutionalizing ethical journalism training, and implementing nationwide media literacy campaigns to increase risk awareness. Comparative examples from the Philippines and Ghana demonstrate viable models for balanced migration reporting. The paper concludes that Nigerian media must move beyond broadcasting the dream to presenting the full truth, enabling informed migration decisions and contributing to sustainable national development.
Oyindoubra Timi-Wood. (Wed,) studied this question.