From ‘citizen diplomacy’ to ‘harsh border diplomacy’: Debating the relevance of Afrocentrism in Nigeria’s contemporary Foreign policy
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Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ikenga International Journal of Institute of african studies Vol. 25, No. 3
Abstract
Nigerian political leadership at independence crafted an African-centred foreign policy as an
aspiring regional hegemon. It relentlessly pursued this ‘Manifest Destiny’ by mobilizing its
human, and material resources to several African states in a bid to carve a putative regional
influence in the continent. Though successive governments have internalized this unique foreign
policy thrust over the years, the return to democratic governance in late 1999 has, however,
seen a decline in Nigeria's commitment to the ideals of Afrocentrism. While Yar’Adua’s
‘Citizenship Diplomacy’ and Buhari’s ‘Border closure’ are a response to the plethora of domestic
challenges, they nonetheless present a challenge to Nigeria’s traditional African diplomacy. This
study, which relies on secondary data, contends that Nigeria’s contemporary foreign policy
thrusts represent the irrelevance of Afrocentrism. It also argues that the relegation of the Africafocused
external relations would have implications for Nigeria’s continental leadership
aspiration, and peace in West Africa specifically. Therefore, the findings of the study revealed
that the erosion of the Nigerian hegemonic leadership in the ECOWAS region will encourage
interventions of extra-African actors in the African crises.
Description
Keywords
Citizenship Diplomacy, border closures, hegemonic leadership Afrocentrism, Pax- Nigeriana