Natural Resource Governance and Conflicts in Nigeria
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Date
2023
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British Journal of Multidisciplinary and Advanced Studies: Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences 4(1)
Abstract
This study investigates the governance of natural resources to promote socioeconomic
and people-centred development in Nigeria. The paper relied on secondary sources of
data, focusing on the three main variables: conflict, politics and power. Nigeria is endowed with
abundant natural resources, which accounts for about 65% of total tax revenue, driven mostly by
an increase in export earnings from the oil and gas sector. Most resource-related conflicts are
implicated by the inequitable distribution of benefits accruing to resources. The State and elite, in
alliance with foreign corporations, enjoy the benefits of the exploited resource. Host-communities
face the debilitating negative environmental impacts and the discrepancy between indigenous
traditional laws and state laws that define ownership of natural resources in a federal but unitary
state has led to controversial relations among states in Nigeria. The paper took an extensive look
at the politics of natural resource extraction and governance in Nigeria and explored the themes
through which the causative relationship between natural resources and conflicts can be
differentiated. It noticed the political economy of natural resources as embedded within the
broader global power relations. The paper concludes that regulation must be anchored to elements
of good governance, especially democracy, rule of law, transparency and accountability, as well
as efficient and equitable management of resource revenues
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Keywords
Natural Resource, governance, conflicts, politics, constitution