Governance and communal conflicts in a post-democratic Nigeria: A case of the oil-producing Niger Delta Region

Type Journal Article - Journal of African Studies and Development
Title Governance and communal conflicts in a post-democratic Nigeria: A case of the oil-producing Niger Delta Region
Author(s)
Volume 2
Issue 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2010
Page numbers 65-74
URL https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Muhammad_Kamaldeen_IMAM-TAMIM/publication/235892781_Akpan/links​/0912f513ea71aef4c2000000.pdf
Abstract
The Niger Delta Region of Nigeria is the store of Nigeria’s crude oil, which accounts for a substantial
part of Nigeria’s revenue and exports. Despite this, the people remain poor, marginalized and restive.
Resort to conflicts is the only way of expressing grievances in oil-rich communities in the Region. The
conflict situation has been alarming since the present democratic dispensation in 1999. Most studies on
conflicts in the region have not actually addressed the issue of inter and intra-communal clashes in
relation to oil resources and Governance. The study sets out to address this through stakeholder
meetings. In the result, various forms of communal conflicts were identified as inter or intra community
conflicts or community against Governments and oil multinationals. The sources of these conflicts
were mostly linked to struggles for sharing oil benefit, absence of standard practice among oil
multinationals, Governments and competition for power. Implications of these were discussed with
useful recommendations.

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