
Contents
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Locating Nigeria in African History Locating Nigeria in African History
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Political Institutions Political Institutions
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Civil Society Civil Society
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Economic and Social Sectors: Policies and Peoples Economic and Social Sectors: Policies and Peoples
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Identity and Insecurity Identity and Insecurity
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Nigeria in the World Nigeria in the World
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References References
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24 In the Trenches with Fela: Reassessing Protest Political Music Culture before the Fourth Republic
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Introduction
Get accessA. Carl LeVan is Associate Professor in the School of International Service at American University in Washington, DC. He is the author of Nigerian Party Competition in a Time of Transition and Terror (forthcoming) as well as Dictators and Democracy in Africa Development: the Political Economy of Good Governance in Nigeria (2015).
Patrick Ukata is the former Director of the American University and American University of Nigeria’s Washington office. He is currently a professorial lecturer at the Elliott School of International Affairs at the George Washington University, Washington, DC.
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Published:07 November 2018
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Abstract
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country and arguably its most important. This introduction provides a succinct overview of the volume’s organization into six thematic areas: chapters within Part I, “Locating Nigeria in African History,” explore the historical, spatial, and cultural dimensions of Nigeria’s existence, including its colonial past and its place in the Atlantic trade. In Part II, chapters covering “political institutions” analyze Nigeria’s legislative politics since independence, its experiments with different executives, as well as federalism, electoral politics, and the operational modalities of its military regimes. Several chapters within Part III explore civil society from theoretical, comparative, and historical perspectives. This includes labor, women’s movements, and protest music. Part IV explores and explains the vicissitudes of Nigeria’s economic performance, including the impact of oil and the possibilities for reforming that problematic sector. Within Part V, several chapters study the sources of insecurity, including Boko Haram, Biafra’s secessionist revival, and farmer-pastoralist tensions. Those authors also consider sources of conflict resolution and alternative tools for public safety, such as informal security services. Part VI situates Nigeria within a globalized world, outlining its foreign policies, transnational features of its religious practices, and its leadership role in international organizations.
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