Understanding Niger Delta’s violence from a World-Ecology perspective
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2021Abstract
The conflict in the Niger Delta region (Nigeria) has become one of the most environmentally and humanly devastating contexts on the African continent since the 1960s. The network of different actors involved in this context forms a complex web in which multiple and asymmetrical dynamics and interactions can be identified. From Jason Moore’s World-Ecology perspective (2015), the article suggests that this complex interaction should not be understood as a mere postcolonial episode in the context of globalisation, but as a historical network of relations. This network, in which human and extra-human natures are intertwined, is key to understanding the process of capital accumulation in the region and the resulting capitalogenic violencesince the 16th century. Against this background, the article also attempts to counter the tendency to interpret violence and social resistance in the Niger Delta region as mere criminal phenomena or from narratives such as the “resource curse” that has simplified the multidimensionality of violence. In this sense, the paper analyses the different forms, strategies and meanings through which local resistance movements have tried to safeguard and re-appropriate their livelihoods and the commons in recent decades in the face of the growing presence of multinational oil corporations.
Document Type
Article
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
32 - Politics
Keywords
Capitalisme
Violència
Níger
Nigèria
Pages
15 p.
Publisher
Grupo de Estudios en Seguridad Internacional (GESI)
Is part of
Revista de Estudios en Seguridad Internacional, vol. 7, núm. 1, 2021
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Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/