On colonial prerequisites of federalism in Nigeria
https://doi.org/10.28995/2073-6339-2023-3-80-94
Abstract
The article considers those elements of federal statehood that in the early 1960s went to the newly independent Nigeria from the outgoing British colonialists. It follows from the analysis undertaken by the author that this legacy was twofold. On the one hand, thanks to the federal scheme developed and implemented by the ex-metropolis, it is still possible to maintain the integrity of the once conditional socio-political space, now called Nigeria; on the other hand, the federation created by London turned out to be national-territorial, that is, initially burdened with a lot of congenital defects and potential risks. By endowing each of the three dominant ethnic groups in Nigeria – Hausa-Fulani, Yoruba, and Igbo – with their own federating entity in the face of the Northern, Western and Eastern regions and thereby fusing together the ethnos and territory, the former metropolis built into the foundations of the federal building being built prerequisites for a powerful ethnic conflict. After independence, which took place in 1960, this conflict broke to the surface; it destabilized Nigeria throughout the existence of the First Republic of 1960- 1966, almost destroying the federation, provoking the secession of Biafra and the bloody civil war that followed. To the full extent, the consequences of the British federal experiment of Nigeria have not been overcome so far; that is why their study is important.
About the Author
A. A. ZakharovRussian Federation
Andrei A. Zakharov, Cand. of Sci. (Philosophy),
6, Miusskaya Sq., Moscow, 125047
References
1. Adeniran, O. (2020), “Nigeria (Federal Republic of Nigeria)”, in Griffiths, A., Chattopadhyay, R., Light, J., Stieren, C. (eds.), The Forum of Federations handbook of federal countries, Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland.
2. Awolowo, O. (1968), Razmyshleniya o nigeriiskoi Konstitutsii [Reflections on Nigerian Constitution], Nauka, Moscow, USSR.
3. Babalola, D. (2019), The political economy of federalism in Nigeria, Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland.
4. Campbell, J., and Page, M. (2018), Nigeria. What everyone needs to know, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.
5. Diamond, L. (1988), Class, ethnicity and democracy in Nigeria. The failure of the First Republic, The Macmillan Press, Houndmills, UK.
6. Dikshit, R.D. (1975), The political geography of federalism. An inquiry into origins and stability, The Macmillan Company of India, New Delhi, India.
7. Egwim, A.I. (2020), The dynamics of federalism in Nigeria, Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland.
8. Falola, T., and Heaton, M. (2008), A history of Nigeria, Cambridge University Press, New York, USA.
9. Ferguson, N. (2004), Empire. How Britain made the modern world, Penguin Books, London, UK.
10. Hill, J.N.C. (2012), Nigeria since independence. Forever fragile? Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, UK.
11. Johnston, H.A.S. (1967), The Fulani empire of Sokoto, Oxford University Press, London, UK, Ibadan, Nigeria, Nairobi, Kenya.
12. Kalu, K.N. (2008), State power, autarchy and political conquest in Nigerian federalism, Lexington Books, Lanham, MD, USA.
13. Kamenskaya, G.V. (1998), Federalism: mifologiya i politicheskaya praktika: Avtoref. dis. ... d-ra polit. nauk [Federalism. Mythology and political practice. Abstract of D. Sc. Dissertation (Political science)], Institut mirovoi economiki i mezhdunarodnykh otnoshenii Rossiiskoi Akademii Nauk, Moscow, Russia.
14. Kendle, J. (1997), Federal Britain. A history, Routledge, London, UK, New York, USA.
15. Natufe, I. (2015), “The amalgamation of Nigeria and the quest for a nation”, in Natufe, I. and Turyinskaya, H. (eds.), Federalism in Africa. Issues and perspectives, Institute of Africa, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, pp. 95–129.
16. Osadolor, O.B. (2018), “The national question in historical perspective”, in Momoh, A. and Adejumobi, S. (eds.), The national question in Nigeria. Comparative perspective, Routledge, London, UK, New York, USA, pp. 31–48.
17. Paden, J. (2005), Muslim civic cultures and conflict resolution. The challenge of democratic federalism in Nigeria, The Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., USA.
18. Suryapin, S. (2013), “Evolution of indirect rule in South-East Nigeria. The system of nominated chiefs”, Aktualnye problemy gumanitarnykh i estestvennykh nauk, vol. 51, no. 4, pp. 112–116.
19. Zotov, Yu.I. and Sledzevskii I.V. (eds.) (1981),Istoriya Nigerii v novoe i noveishee vremya [History of Nigeria in modern and recent times], Glavnaya redaktsiya vostochnoi literatury, Moscow, USSR.
Review
For citations:
Zakharov A.A. On colonial prerequisites of federalism in Nigeria. RSUH/RGGU Bulletin Series "Political Science. History. International Relations". 2023;(3):80-94. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.28995/2073-6339-2023-3-80-94