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This book examines the extent to which peacebuilding processes such
as disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration are possible in
the attempt to demilitarize Nigeria's oil region and establish a
stable post-conflict environment for nurturing durable peace. The
book argues that the failure of the peacebuilders to address the
structural tensions at the heart of insurgency, along with
competition for access to the material benefits of peacebuilding,
have revived violence at repeated intervals that punctuates the
progression of peace. The author's analysis shows how the
interventions pursued by peacebuilders have been successful in
stabilizing the oil region by taking arms from insurgents, paying
them monthly allowances, and building their capacity to reintegrate
into society through a range of transformational processes. While
these interventions are praiseworthy, they have transformed the
political realities of peacebuilding into an economic enterprise
that makes recourse to violence a lucrative endeavour as identity
groups frequently mobilize insurgency targeting oil infrastructure
to compel the state to enter into negotiations with them. There was
little consideration for the impact corruption might have on the
peacebuilding process. As corruption becomes entrenched, it fosters
exclusion and anger, leading to further conflict. The book proposes
pathways to positive peacebuilding in Nigeria's oil region.
This book examines the extent to which peacebuilding processes such
as disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration are possible in
the attempt to demilitarize Nigeria's oil region and establish a
stable post-conflict environment for nurturing durable peace. The
book argues that the failure of the peacebuilders to address the
structural tensions at the heart of insurgency, along with
competition for access to the material benefits of peacebuilding,
have revived violence at repeated intervals that punctuates the
progression of peace. The author's analysis shows how the
interventions pursued by peacebuilders have been successful in
stabilizing the oil region by taking arms from insurgents, paying
them monthly allowances, and building their capacity to reintegrate
into society through a range of transformational processes. While
these interventions are praiseworthy, they have transformed the
political realities of peacebuilding into an economic enterprise
that makes recourse to violence a lucrative endeavour as identity
groups frequently mobilize insurgency targeting oil infrastructure
to compel the state to enter into negotiations with them. There was
little consideration for the impact corruption might have on the
peacebuilding process. As corruption becomes entrenched, it fosters
exclusion and anger, leading to further conflict. The book proposes
pathways to positive peacebuilding in Nigeria's oil region.
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