Olukoju earned a bachelor's degree (with a First Class Honours) from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka in June 1980, and master's and doctorate degrees in history from the University of Ibadan in 1982 and 1991 respectively. From 1984 to 1987, Olukoju lectured at Ogun State University (now Olabisi Onabanjo University). In September 1987, he joined the University of Lagos' department of history and strategic studies.[1] In 1998, Olukoju was appointed a substantive professor of history, and a university distinguished professor twenty years later. He served as the head of the history department from 2001 to 2004, and then as the dean of the faculty of arts from 2005 to 2009.[1] He was a DAAD Guest Professor of Economic History at University of Bayreuth, Germany from May to August 2022.[3]
At different times in his career, Olukoju has held postdoctoral visiting research fellowships of the Japan Foundation, the British Academy, DAAD, Institute of Developing Economies, as well as of the Henry Charles Chapman Foundation and the A. G. Leventis Foundation at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London. He also earned a West African Research Association (WARA) residency at Emory University, Atlanta. Olukoju was University of Lagos best researcher in the arts/humanities in 2006 and 2009.[4]
Olukoju is currently a member of the editorial advisory board of Journal of Global History.[5] At various time between 1998 and 2015, he has served on the editorial advisory boards of Journal of African History, African Economic History, Afrika Zamani: Journal of the Association of African Historians, and History in Africa. In 2008, he was elected as the first African on the executive committee of the International Maritime History Association.[4]
Olukoju also contributes opinion essays about current socio-political issues in Nigeria, especially with regards to education and the university system, in different publishing medium such as The Conversation, among others.[4]
In 2013, in celebration of Olukoju's scholarship, Saheed Aderinto and Paul Osifodunrin published an edited festschrift titled The Third Wave of Historical Scholarship on Nigeria: Essays in Honor of Ayodeji Olukoju.[citation needed][26]
^Akinjide, O., & Olukoju, A. (2005). Nigerian Peoples and Cultures. Lagos: University of Lagos.
^Olukoju, A., Lawal, A. A., & Faluyi, E. K. (eds.). (2003). Fundamentals of Economic History. Lagos: First Academic Publishers.
^Olukoju, A., Apata, Z. O., & Akinwumi, O. (Eds.). (2003). Northeast Yorubaland: Studies in the History and Culture of a Frontier Zone. Rex Charles Publication.
^Olukoju, A., & Falaiye, M. (Eds.). (2008). Global Understanding in the Age of Terrorism. Lagos: University of Lagos Press.
^Olukoju, A., Adesina, O., Adesoji, A. & Amusa, S. (2019, eds.). Security Challenges and Management in Modern Nigeria. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2019.
^Aderinto, Saheed; Osifodunrin, Paul (eds.). The Third Wave of Historical Scholarship on Nigeria: Essays in Honor of Ayodeji Olukoju. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN978-1-4438-3994-5.
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