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Afr. J. Pol. Sci. Int. Relat.


Vol. 1 No.
2



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Olarinmoye OO


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African Journal of Political Science and International Relations Vol. 1 (2), 020-027, November 2007          
ISSN 1996-0832© 2006 Academic Journals

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

Yoruba politics 1999-2003

 

 

Omobolaji Ololade Olarinmoye

 

Department of Political Science and Public Administration, Igbinedion University, Okada, Edo

 

State, Nigeria. E-mail: ololade001@yahoo.com

 

Accepted 12, October 2007

 
    Abstract

 

 

 

This paper examines the politics of ethnic mobilization. It uses as a case study, the political mobilization activities of one of the major ethnic groups in Nigeria, the Yoruba of the Southwest, to chart the sequence of relations between the ethnic group and the Nigerian State between 1999 - 2003. The paper argues that ethnic mobilization is not an anomic response to the disequilibria generated by modernization and definitely not an expression of deep-rooted animosities or difference but a quest for group security and development within a chaotic and often inegalitarian state structure. The weakness of civil society structures and absence of viable democratic structures for societal “voice” has encouraged the rise of ethnic politics, an amalgam of traditional and modernist principles, values and structures, as a means for articulating the demands of society and taking the lead in actualizing such in the face of an unresponsive state.

 

Key words: Ethnic, politics, Nigeria, identity, security, development, opposition.

 

 

 

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