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The provision of food, shelter, clothing, and other essential parts of life are the foundations of every government, and the hallmark of governance is to protect the safety of citizens' lives and property. This explains why every government develops models and plans to suit the diverse expectations of its citizens. A good 'development plan,' as many experts have pointed out is a tool that the government may use to meet and cater for the desires and demands of its population (Tordoff, 1993; Iheanacho 2014). That is to say, without a solid development strategy, a country would struggle to make reasonable progress and will continue to languish in abysmal poverty.Development planning is viewed as a focused, articulated policy strategy or means of overcoming economic difficulties. The central aim of development plan is to speedy up economic recovery and achieve economic productivity. It is a long-term strategy aimed at bringing about permanent structural changes in an economy.
In this book, Jeremiah I. Dibua challenges prevailing notions of Africa's development crisis by drawing attention to the role of modernization as a way of understanding the nature and dynamics of the crisis, and how to overcome the problem of underdevelopment. He specifically focuses on Nigeria and its development trajectory since it exemplifies the crisis of underdevelopment in the continent. He explores various theoretical and empirical issues involved in understanding the crisis, including state, class, gender and culture, often neglected in analysis, from an interdisciplinary, radical political economy perspective. This is the first book to adopt such an approach and to develop a new framework for analyzing Nigeria's and Africa's development crisis. It will influence the debate on the development dilemma of African and Third World societies and will be of interest to scholars and students of race and ethnicity, modern African history, class analysis, gender studies, and development studies.
The first edition of State and Society in Nigeria, published in 1980, was and remains a dominant influence in teaching, research, policy and practice of state-society relations in Nigeria for more than a generation. The volume of essays has remained one of the most cited in the field – testimony to its enduring content and perspective as well as the beauty, accessibility and clarity of its language. This new edition revisits, extends and reconsiders aspects of the first edition in light of developments in the literature since 1980 and offers new insights and interpretations on issues of political economy, politics, and sociology such as the country’s Civil War (1967-1970) the political economy of oil, debt, and democratization and the complexities and ethnic identities and rivalries and religious accommodation and conflict, and of the multiple ways in which they intersect with one another.
This book provides a systematic examination of the relationship between industrial clusters and poverty, which is analyzed using a multidimensional framework. It examines the often-neglected concept of social protection as a means of mitigating the risks and vulnerabilities faced by workers and citizens in poor countries. By analyzing the case of the Otigba Information and Communications Technology cluster in Lagos, Nigeria, the author shows under which conditions firms in productive clusters can pass on benefits to workers in ways that improve their living standards in the wider socio-economic and spatial context of the region. The results presented provide substantial evidence of opportunities for economic development, helping planners to explore different avenues for integrating firm-driven social protection into social policy.
This study examines the constraints of the international system's structure on the domestic and international behaviour of less developed states in general and Nigeria in particular. It contributes to the debates on the relationships between domestic and external sources of foreign policy.Focusing on economic diplomacy, it explicates the nature of political economy on foreign policy processes.