Beverley is an regulatory and compliance professional and a lawyer. She is called to bar in Nigeria, England, and Wales. She is on the panel of neutrals at the Lagos Multi Door Court and the Lagos Court of Arbitration.
Balancing Expertise, Opportunity and Global Representation in Sports Arbitration The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) recently released an analysis of its arbitrator appointments from 2022, and the results are striking. Around 20% of arbitrators handle roughly 60% of all cases, and the vast majority of these individuals are European. For an institution that…
How Should Boards Handle Corporate Governance Crises? Lessons from Paystack on Crisis Response and Prevention How Organisations Must Respond When Leadership Fails the Trust Test The recent allegations surrounding Ezra Olubi, co-founder of Paystack, have thrust into the public arena a pertinent question that will give governance professionals something serious to ponder on: what…
Explore how generative AI is reshaping filmmaking—offering efficiency and creativity while raising ethical, legal, and industry concerns.
Lagos housing crisis: soaring rents, inflation, and weak laws deepen the city’s housing deficit, leaving tenants burdened and landlords unchecked.
OAL served as Legal Adviser for Kemi Adetiba’s bold new Netflix series, To Kill A Monkey (TKIM), offering full legal support from concept to global release.
Olisa Agbakoba Legal (OAL) advised on Netflix’s “To Kill A Monkey,” Kemi Adetiba’s bold 8-part series redefining African storytelling on the global stage.
Supreme Court rules in Ubom v. Globacom that image rights claims fall under the State High Court, not copyright law, clarifying jurisdiction and consent issues.
The IOMed Convention marks a global shift toward mediation in resolving State disputes, positioning Hong Kong as a hub for international ADR.
The Collective Management Regulations 2025 modernise Nigeria’s copyright system, boosting digital licensing, rights protection, and creative sector growth.
OAL’s Sports team defended player Priscilla M. after Rivers Angels FC prematurely ended her contract, petitioning the NFF Players Status Committee on her behalf