Title of article :
The Internationalization of Oil Violence in the Niger Delta of Nigeria
Author/Authors :
Ojakorotu, Victor Department of International Studies - Monash University - South Africa, Johannesburg
Abstract :
This paper unpacks the crisis in the Niger Delta of Nigeria with reference to its external dimensions by
which is meant the involvement of international non-governmental organisations in the politics of
local environmental governance. It takes as its point of departure the events (in the 1990s) that
underpinned the international community’s engagement with an issue that could have been regarded as
Nigeria’s domestic affair and follows with an assessment of the impact of internationalisation of the
crisis on the major actors in the region. It is noted that the crisis in the Niger Delta has been
predicated for over four decades on a number of complex issues in Nigeria’s geo-political landscape.
The emergence of organized pressure groups (in the early 1990s) and their protestations against human
rights abuses and environmental problems in the region added a ‘new’ dimension to the crisis. In
tackling its thematic concern, this paper interrogates the involvement of the international civil society
in the Niger Delta and concludes with an appraisal of the extent to which the internationalisation of the
crisis engendered both attitudinal and policy shifts on the part of the main actors.
Keywords :
Nigeria , Oil , Niger Delta
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics