Oil, Militancy, and National Security: The Nexus in the Niger Delta
Keywords:
militancy, security, exploration, poverty, marginalisation, degradationAbstract
The Niger Delta has remained a central arena of conflict in Nigeria’s national security architecture due to its vast oil wealth and persistent patterns of militancy. This study examines the nexus between oil exploitation, militancy, and national security in the Niger Delta, situating the analysis within the framework of the resource curse theory. Adopting a qualitative research design, the study relies exclusively on secondary data drawn from academic literature, policy documents, government reports, and credible media sources. Data were systematically collected and subjected to documentary analysis, employing qualitative content analysis and thematic analysis to identify recurring patterns, narratives, and underlying dynamics linking oil production to militant activities and security challenges. The findings reveal that oil wealth, rather than fostering development, has intensified socio-economic marginalization, environmental degradation, elite capture, and weak governance, collectively fueling grievances and militant mobilization in the region. Militancy, expressed through pipeline vandalism, oil theft, kidnappings, and armed confrontations, poses significant threats to national security by undermining economic stability, reducing state revenue, militarizing the region, and eroding public trust in state institutions. The study concludes that the persistence of insecurity in the Niger Delta reflects a broader manifestation of the resource curse, where governance failures and inequitable resource management transform natural wealth into a source of conflict. It recommends inclusive governance reforms, environmental remediation, equitable resource distribution, and sustainable development strategies as critical pathways to breaking the cycle of oil militancy insecurity in the Niger Delta. The study contributes to existing scholarship by deepening the understanding of how resource-driven conflicts intersect with national security in resource-rich developing states.
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