1 / 29

Citizens, Society, & The State

Nigeria. Citizens, Society, & The State. Presentation Outline. III. Citizens, Society, & The State Political socialization Cleavages Civil society and interest groups Political violence. III. a) Political Socialization. Do you remember what political socialization means?. Family

elam
Download Presentation

Citizens, Society, & The State

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nigeria Citizens, Society, & The State

  2. Presentation Outline III. Citizens, Society, & The State • Political socialization • Cleavages • Civil society and interest groups • Political violence

  3. III. a) Political Socialization Do you remember what political socialization means? • Family • Ethnic tribe • Church/Mosque

  4. Family Top left: a poor woman and her child collecting contaminated water for drinking Left: A wealthy Christian family from southern Nigeria has political influence, power, and wealth

  5. Ethnic tribe Ethnic groups play a significant role in Nigerian political socialization. Tribalism and loyalty to one’s nation is emphasized over allegiance to the Nigerian state. An Igbo family wearing traditional dress

  6. Church/Mosque More than 90% of Nigerians are either Christian or Muslim. About one half are Christian, while the other half are Muslim. Places of worship are major centers of political socialization.

  7. Left: Christians tend to be pro-American while Muslims generally hold an unfavorable view of America and the West. Top: Both Muslims and Christians do overwhelmingly support democratic values.

  8. III. b) Cleavages • Ethnic cleavages • Religious divisions • Wealth gap

  9. Ethnic cleavages • Nigeria has over 250 ethnic groups, each with its own language, custom, and culture • Tensions do flare up and ethnic violence against another nation/tribe is not uncommon • In 1967 the Igbo people separated from Nigeria and declared independence as the Republic of Biafra; after three years of brutal civil war the state was reunified in 1970

  10. Left: The short-lived Igbo Republic of Biafra

  11. Left: Igbo children starving during the civil war Top: Massacre at an Igbo hospital by Nigerian soldiers

  12. After the Biafran Civil War more states were created which splintered the power of the main ethnic groups. Separatist movements have not disappeared but are no where near as prevalent as they once were or are in states such as China or Russia.

  13. Religious divisions • Religion splits Nigeria in half: The North is Muslim while the South is Christian • Bombings of churches and mosques occur frequently and tensions are highest during elections and near the middle belt • Islamic fundamentalism and radicalism has manifested itself in the North with the appearance of the political group Boko Haram

  14. Top: The results of the 2011 Nigerian presidential election reinforced the religious divisions. The South supported the Christian PDP candidate, while the North supported the Muslim CPC candidate

  15. Wealth gap • Despite its oil wealth, more than 70% of Nigerians live in poverty • In fact, this income gap is the largest of the 6 AP case study countries • Poverty occurs throughout Nigeria but the North tends to be poorer as all of Nigeria’s oil is concentrated in the Southern Delta region

  16. Nigeria

  17. The North tends to be poorer than the South with the exception of Kaduna and Kano states

  18. Female literacy is lower in the North. This is partially explained by poverty, and by the influence of traditional Islamic values regarding female education

  19. III. c) Civil Society and interest groups • Nigeria has an active civil society and partly free press • There are hundreds of different voluntary and professional associations that operate within Nigeria and attempt to influence government policy • However, some journalists have faced intimidation, human rights groups have been restricted at times, and some human rights activists have been tortured and even killed

  20. Nigeria’s press is partly free which ranks well in its region but is certainly not up to Western liberal democratic standards of press freedoms.

  21. Interest Groups • Nigeria’s interest group arrangement is best described as an emerging pluralist system • There are a number of prominent interest groups which do influence government policy • However, there still are restrictions on some interest groups, particularly human rights groups

  22. Key Nigerian Interest Groups Nigerian Bar Association Nigerian Labor Congress National Association of Nigerian Students National Council of Women’s Societies

  23. III. d) Political violence • Peaceful demonstrations occur throughout Nigeria • However, political violence does occur with regularity, particularly during election years • This contrasts with more liberal democracies where political violence occurs only on rare occasions

  24. The Islamic Fundamentalist group Boko Haram has been responsible for Church bombings, executions, and tortures throughout Northern Nigeria. Boko Haram advocates creating a Nigerian theocracy and separate state in the North Top left: Boko Haram militants Top right: victims of a recent Boko Haram bombing

  25. Niger Delta Violence- Militants in the Niger Delta have burned oil fields; some want more oil profits; while others are protesting the environmental damage done by the oil industry Top left: Niger Delta militants Top right: The torching of oil fields in the Niger Delta

More Related