OPEN ACCESS JOURNALS
           
home about us journals search

African Journal of History and Culture

     
   AJHC Home
   About AJHC
   Submit Manuscripts
   Instructions for Authors
   Editors
   Call For Paper
   Archive
   Faculty 1000
   Conferences
   Associations

  Afr. J. History  Culture

 

  Vol. 2 No. 3

  Viewing options:


  •Reprint (PDF) (140k)

  Search Pubmed for articles by:


Ambe-Uva TN
 


  Other links:
  PubMed Citation
  Related articles in PubMed

Other Journals
African Journal of Agricultural Research
African Journal  of Environmental Science & Technology
Biotechnology & Molecular Biology Reviews

African Journal of Biochemistry Research

African Journal of Microbiology Research
African Journal of Pure & Applied Chemistry
African Journal of Food Science
Journal of Cell & Animal Biology
African Journal of Pharmacy & Pharmacology

African Journal of Biotechnology
Journal of Medicinal Plant Research
International Journal of Physical Sciences
Scientific Research and Essays
 

African Journal of History and Culture Vol. 2(3), pp. 4252, April 2010

© 2010 Academic Journals  

 

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

Identity politics and the Jos crisis: Evidence, lessons and challenges of good governance

 

Terhemba Nom Ambe-Uva

 

School of International Studies, National Open University of Nigeria,14-16

Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island, Lagos, Nigeria. E-mail: mneuter@gmail.com.

Tel: +2348068799158.

 

Accepted 3 March, 2010

 

  Abstract

 

Concerns with identity politics especially those woven around conflict have got an almost outrageous timeliness. The salient global role of ethnic and religious identity as it affects everything from democratic development to risk of disruptive communal conflicts at domestic level has become an important dimension of present-day world societies, looming largely in multiethnic societies. This paper takes a critical look at identity politics and conflict in Jos, a setting once regarded as “the home of peace and tourism in Nigeria”. The point of departure is a critical examination of the 28 November, 2008 crisis in Jos North LGA. Using in-depth interviews and content analysis of opinions, the study situates the conflict within the relationship between the “indigene-settler” syndrome and the state, with its ugly hydra-headed manifestations. It argues that the conflict with a colouration of ethnic and religious garb was also orchestrated under the façade of politics. It is suggested that the commitment of good governance and the institutionalisation of democracy remains the surest means of nipping in the bud the crises in Jos. The findings have important implications for aggregate research on ethnic and religious conflicts in Nigeria.
 
Key words: Identity politics, ethnic and religious conflicts, indigene-settler, Jos, good governance.

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Advertise on AJHC | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Help

© Academic Journals 2002 - 2010