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  • Pages: 374

    Year: 2016

    Dimensions: 229 x 152mm

    ISBN:
    Shipping class: POD

    Nigerian Federalism

    Continuing Quest for Stability and Nation-Building

    Nigerian Federalism: Continuing Quest for Stability and
    Nation-Building
    explores the nature of and the debate over a number of
    recurrent issues, such as the “origins of Nigerian federalism, the
    number of state units in the federal system, fiscal issues, political
    parties, distributional issues, and intergovernmental relations” in
    Nigerian federalism since the establishment of protofederalism under the
    Richards Constitution, 1946 seventy years ago. In exploring the issues,
    the book seeks to answer the question, “what accounts for the
    persistence of Nigerian federalism, despite the serious discontents that
    the debate throws up now and again?” The book offers a
    reinterpretation, which argues that the demand for open-access federalism,
    which anchors the major trend in the age-long debate on the structure of
    Nigerian federalism, is ahistorical and therefore static.

    The book
    uniquely emphasises the need to periodise the practice of Nigerian
    federalism into four major phases. Based on the periodisation, two
    cardinal propositions emerge from the various chapters of the book.
    First, in spite of separatist and centrifugal threats to its existence,
    Nigerian federalism has typically never sought to eliminate diversity,
    but to manage it. In this sense, the construction of Nigeria’s federal
    system from its earliest beginnings shows clearly that it is both a
    creature of diversity and an understanding that diversity will remain
    ingrained in its DNA. Secondly, Nigeria’s federal practice has not
    sought to mirror any model of “open-access federalism”, be it in the United
    States, Canada or elsewhere. Instead, Nigeria’s federal system has been a
    homegrown, if unstable modulation between foedus and separatus, a
    constantly negotiated terrain among centripetal and centrifugal forces
    and between centralisation and decentralisation. Consequently, a
    historical, periodised understanding of Nigerian federalism is
    inevitably essential. It is this historical and
    theoretical-methodological approach to explaining and understanding
    Nigerian federalism that gives the book its unique character.

    The book
    is for the general reader as well as for students, including researchers
    of Nigerian federalism and of Nigerian constitutional and political
    development, policymakers, and political parties.

    £50.00

    About the editors

    Okechukwu Ibeanu

    Okechukwu Ibeanu is professor of Political Science and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. He is also the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Human Rights Council on the adverse effects of toxic wastes on the enjoyment of human rights. He has published extensively on conflict and security issues in the Niger Delta, including Civil Society and Conflict Management in the Niger Delta (2005) and Oiling Violence (2006), which is on the proliferation of small arms and light weapons in the Niger Delta. His latest book is Election and the Future of Democracy in Nigeria (2007).