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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 |
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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. |