Gender, Climate Change and Herder Farmer Conflicts: How Far Has SDGs 1,2,3,13,15 & 16 Addressed the Crises in Southern Kaduna, Nigeria?
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Date
2025
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Publisher
Journal of Lifestyle and SDGs Review
Abstract
Objective: The research is intended to interrogate the remote causes of problems arising
from these concepts and to also proffering lasting solutions, taking Southern Kaduna as
a study. However, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 2 and 13 that underscore
hunger and climatic change to needs to be activated to address crises between farmers
and the herders. While gender advocacy for equal treatment has gained popular support
in the south, unfavorable climate change has reconfigured the life pattern of the southern
Kaduna residents, in great manner that has affected their herding and grassing for cattle
as their economic survival. Theoretical framework: This study adopted the relative
deprivation theory as a framework for analysis. This theory was espoused by the likes of
Davis (1959), Runciman (1966), Karl Polanyi among others. Relative deprivation explains
the lack of resources as the reason for conflicts in the society. Methods: It adopted descriptive methodology in its data where secondary data was garnered from journals,
publications, internet, Newspapers etc. Findings: Revealed that severe climate conditions
terribly aggravated lands degradation, leading to decline in food, water and for survival
of the cattle in Southern Kaduna, to which the quest for better grazing land leads to
conflicts between the herders and farmers. Conclusion: The study recommended that
sustainable ranches in Nigeria be revived with adequate facilities to minimize the effects
of climate change through climate adaption mechanism as done in the western world.