Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria
General population growth and an increase in the number of farmers, environmental degradation, disruption of conditions for resolving land and water disputes, and the proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) in the Sahel and West Africa have exacerbated the struggle for the survival and...
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Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
2020-12-01
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Online Access: | http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/25276/18920 |
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doaj-4d7053e11fe048eab0548a3a9397e6b42020-12-17T19:52:42ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Vestnik RUDN International Relations2313-06602313-06792020-12-0120469870610.22363/2313-0660-2020-20-4-698-70619610Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of NigeriaEjiroghene Augustine Oghuvbu0Oluwatobi Blessing Oghuvbu1Covenant UniversityDelta State UniversityGeneral population growth and an increase in the number of farmers, environmental degradation, disruption of conditions for resolving land and water disputes, and the proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) in the Sahel and West Africa have exacerbated the struggle for the survival and security of economic livelihoods, and in particular negatively affected relationships between shepherds and farmers in several communities in Africa. This kind of conflict between farmers and herdsmen mainly applies to Nigeria, but is also present in other African countries, especially in Mali, Burkina Faso, Chad, Senegal, Cameroon, and Côte d’Ivoire. Such conflicts are not triggered by a single reason, but are driven by a set of multi-causal factors, such as scarce resources in the face of greater need, reprisal attacks, land and climate change, etc. Obviously, in case of Nigeria this kind of conflicts have a disintegrative impact, as they lead to the inimical effects to the country’s unity. The need for fostering value reorientation and restoring earlier interactive ties between herdsmen and farmers seems vital today, so that Nigerians can learn to appreciate the values that unite them more than those that separate the society.http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/25276/18920conflictfarmersherdsmennational unitynigeria |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ejiroghene Augustine Oghuvbu Oluwatobi Blessing Oghuvbu |
spellingShingle |
Ejiroghene Augustine Oghuvbu Oluwatobi Blessing Oghuvbu Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria Vestnik RUDN International Relations conflict farmers herdsmen national unity nigeria |
author_facet |
Ejiroghene Augustine Oghuvbu Oluwatobi Blessing Oghuvbu |
author_sort |
Ejiroghene Augustine Oghuvbu |
title |
Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria |
title_short |
Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria |
title_full |
Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria |
title_fullStr |
Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria |
title_full_unstemmed |
Farmers-Herdsmen Conflict in Africa: The Case of Nigeria |
title_sort |
farmers-herdsmen conflict in africa: the case of nigeria |
publisher |
Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) |
series |
Vestnik RUDN International Relations |
issn |
2313-0660 2313-0679 |
publishDate |
2020-12-01 |
description |
General population growth and an increase in the number of farmers, environmental degradation, disruption of conditions for resolving land and water disputes, and the proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) in the Sahel and West Africa have exacerbated the struggle for the survival and security of economic livelihoods, and in particular negatively affected relationships between shepherds and farmers in several communities in Africa. This kind of conflict between farmers and herdsmen mainly applies to Nigeria, but is also present in other African countries, especially in Mali, Burkina Faso, Chad, Senegal, Cameroon, and Côte d’Ivoire. Such conflicts are not triggered by a single reason, but are driven by a set of multi-causal factors, such as scarce resources in the face of greater need, reprisal attacks, land and climate change, etc. Obviously, in case of Nigeria this kind of conflicts have a disintegrative impact, as they lead to the inimical effects to the country’s unity. The need for fostering value reorientation and restoring earlier interactive ties between herdsmen and farmers seems vital today, so that Nigerians can learn to appreciate the values that unite them more than those that separate the society. |
topic |
conflict farmers herdsmen national unity nigeria |
url |
http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/25276/18920 |
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AT ejirogheneaugustineoghuvbu farmersherdsmenconflictinafricathecaseofnigeria AT oluwatobiblessingoghuvbu farmersherdsmenconflictinafricathecaseofnigeria |
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