When I was living in Igboland in 1993 and from 1994 to 1996, there was not much talk about Biafra, the secessionist republic that had been defeated by the Nigerian army in 1970. Not one Igbo politician suggested that his or her people in the southeast of Nigeria should secede again and proclaim a second Biafra. Since 1984, Nigeria had been ruled by the military, and political hopes focused on a return to democracy. Democracy did come in 1999, but it proved a big disappointment. It did not end the marginalisation of the Igbo but led to an increase in the number of ethnic and religious clashes, with Igbo 'migrants' in northern Nigeria as the main victims. It was Nigeria's fourth transition to democracy, and the Igbo lost out again. When I ret...
The events leading to the Nigeria Civil War marked the triumph of force and violence over dialogue a...
After over fifty years of independence, many African states are steeped in the crisis of nation-buil...
This study examines the Biafran secession of 1967-1970 and how the secessionist government construct...
Nigeria is largely a tripod comprising the Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba ethnic nationalities. For politica...
The Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), an ethnicmilitia, emer...
The renewed demand for Biafra by lgbo people is a rejection of their post-war socio-political and e...
Against the backdrop of the continued crisis of state legitimacy, precarious balance between ethnic ...
Before the direct contact with Europe, the area of present-day south-eastern Nigeria was inhabited b...
<h3 data-fontsize="17" data-lineheight="23">Abstract</h3> <p>The Biafra War (1967-...
Numerous explanations of the failure of the Biafran enterprise highlight the absence of legitimacy a...
The Igbo people survived a civil war that raged between 1967 and 1970 and that devastated their lan...
This paper examines the concept of “generations” as one of the key features of contemporary Igbo nat...
Numerous explanations of the failure of the Biafran enterprise highlight the absence of legitimacy a...
Nearly forty years after the event, the Nigerian Civil War still conjures up powerful political imag...
In May 1967, the Ibo-dominated eastern region of Nigeria embarked on a 30-month secessionist campaig...
The events leading to the Nigeria Civil War marked the triumph of force and violence over dialogue a...
After over fifty years of independence, many African states are steeped in the crisis of nation-buil...
This study examines the Biafran secession of 1967-1970 and how the secessionist government construct...
Nigeria is largely a tripod comprising the Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba ethnic nationalities. For politica...
The Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), an ethnicmilitia, emer...
The renewed demand for Biafra by lgbo people is a rejection of their post-war socio-political and e...
Against the backdrop of the continued crisis of state legitimacy, precarious balance between ethnic ...
Before the direct contact with Europe, the area of present-day south-eastern Nigeria was inhabited b...
<h3 data-fontsize="17" data-lineheight="23">Abstract</h3> <p>The Biafra War (1967-...
Numerous explanations of the failure of the Biafran enterprise highlight the absence of legitimacy a...
The Igbo people survived a civil war that raged between 1967 and 1970 and that devastated their lan...
This paper examines the concept of “generations” as one of the key features of contemporary Igbo nat...
Numerous explanations of the failure of the Biafran enterprise highlight the absence of legitimacy a...
Nearly forty years after the event, the Nigerian Civil War still conjures up powerful political imag...
In May 1967, the Ibo-dominated eastern region of Nigeria embarked on a 30-month secessionist campaig...
The events leading to the Nigeria Civil War marked the triumph of force and violence over dialogue a...
After over fifty years of independence, many African states are steeped in the crisis of nation-buil...
This study examines the Biafran secession of 1967-1970 and how the secessionist government construct...