Abstract
The construction of resilient digital infrastructures has emerged as a decisive policy concern for countries pursuing sustainable digital transformation. In Nigeria, the rapid expansion of digital services has deepened reliance on infrastructure systems that must remain reliable, secure, and adaptable to evolving threats. Despite considerable progress in connectivity and digital adoption, Nigeria's digital infrastructure continues to face persistent challenges, including unstable power supply, cybersecurity threats, regulatory fragmentation, skills deficits, and pronounced disparities between urban and rural areas. These concerns raise fundamental questions about the sustainability and effectiveness of the country's digital transformation agenda. This paper examines policy pathways for building resilient digital infrastructure in Nigeria and investigates their implications for sustainable digital transformation. Adopting a conceptual and policy driven analytical approach, the study reviews the trajectory of Nigeria's digital infrastructure development, analyses existing policy and regulatory frameworks, and identifies the principal obstacles that undermine infrastructure resilience. The analysis foregrounds the significance of governance coordination, durable investment frameworks, cybersecurity and data stewardship, energy efficient infrastructure planning, human capacity development, and inclusive access policies as essential enablers of digital resilience. The paper contends that resilient digital infrastructure constitutes a critical intervening mechanism through which policy measures translate into sustainable economic development, social integration, and improved governance outcomes. The study reinforces the need for integrated, inclusive, and context sensitive policy strategies to ensure that Nigeria's digital transformation is robust, equitable, and sustainable over the long term.

National Library of Nigeria
Association of Nigerian Authors
Nigerian Library Association
EagleScan
Crossref