Institutional Repository | Ajayi Crowther University
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.acu.edu.ng:443//handle/123456789/147
Title: Poverty and Environmental Safety in Nigeria: A Sustainable Development Perspective
Authors: Ajadi, Abdulrasaq Ishola
Abdulkareem, Abdulrazaq Kayode
Bello, Mohammed Lawan
Aluko, Opeyemi Idowu
Keywords: Administration
Development
Poverty
Relative Deprivation
Safety
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: ADMINISTRATIO
Abstract: The level of safety in a country is a yardstick for it potential growth and sustainable development. If the environment is not safe, there will be no viable economic activity going on and thus the level of poverty and inequality in such environment will be high. Amidst of the unsafe environment, there is usually some group of people benefiting from such political economy scenario. Such group will therefore wish to continue to benefit from such environment at the expense of the larger society thereby creating deeper poverty gaps. The question this paper seeks answer is; to what extent is Nigeria’s environment safe for sustainable development to take place as a recipe for developing countries? The relative deprivation theory is used to establish the fact that deprivation of the people in an environment leads to inequality and poverty. This deprivation hinders rapid socioeconomic and political activities to take place by creating an unsafe political economy environment which as well affects sustainable development. Data from Afrobarometer database on Nigeria were examined, analysed and interpreted. The paper concludes that making the environment more secure for economic activities reduces poverty and inequality. The study recommends that an equitable distribution of income should be enforced first to the immediate environment whose land was usurp and then to the other federating units also.
URI: http://localhost:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/147
ISSN: 2068 –5459
Appears in Collections:Department of Political Science

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Breaking the Cycle of Poverty Rethinking Africas Socio-political Economy (3).pdf288.56 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.