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Changing Patterns of Herders/Farmers Conflict and the Implications for Nation Building in Nigeria

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  • Kenneth T. Azaigba, PhD

    (Department of History & Strategic Studies, Federal University, Dutsin-Ma, Katsina State, Nigeria)

  • Henry T. Ahom, PhD

    (Department of History & Strategic Studies, Federal University, Dutsin-Ma, Katsina State, Nigeria)

Abstract

Herders/Farmers conflict in Nigeria is a vexed national question that is threatening nation building. Though the conflict is historically an old one spanning pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial epochs; the Nigerian State is yet to find a remedy to the crisis. The patterns of the conflict have also changed. The conflict has metamorphosed from a local community conflict to a large scale conflict using sophisticated weapons and involving the sacking of settled communities on their ancestral homes. This development has ignited debates as to the real motives for the persistence of the conflict. Indeed, the lethality of the contemporary pattern has left damnable implications for nation building and begs for thoughtful policy interventions. This paper historicizes the patterns of herders/farmers conflict in Nigeria since 1914 and highlights the implications on nation building. It contends that herders/farmers conflict is escalating the bound of a local resource conflict to a politicized ethnic and religious one. The implications of this development on nation building and human security are damning and capable of degenerating into a wide scale civil war just as the experiences of Somalia and Rwanda depicts. Thus, the paper proposes thoughtful policy prescriptions to tame the gradual slide to State failure. The analysis in the paper is laced in a historical methodology using primary and secondary sources.

Suggested Citation

  • Kenneth T. Azaigba, PhD & Henry T. Ahom, PhD, 2021. "Changing Patterns of Herders/Farmers Conflict and the Implications for Nation Building in Nigeria," International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science, International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science (IJRISS), vol. 5(07), pages 836-840, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:bcp:journl:v:5:y:2021:i:07:p:836-840
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