As proffered within the resource curse theory, states which have an abundance of mineral resources hold a higher propensity for contest over resource rents. The resultant rentier system leads a politico-economic contest over access to resources and the associated benefits, fostering economic policies which breed corruption, regional and ethnic factionalism, and eventually violent conflict. As the two leading oilproducing regions on the subcontinent, Nigeria’s Niger Delta and Cabinda in Angola are no exception to this trend. To place the conflicts in these regions in their historical context, this article examines the linkages between oil resources and the onset and prolongation of violence, bearing out the significance of the va...
The cataclysms in much of the post 1990 natural resource exploitation in the Niger Delta which ampli...
This paper explores the political economy of resource curse with the view of appreciating the develo...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Countries endowed with natural resources such as Nigeria have been susceptible to economic underdeve...
We predictably believe that immense natural resources would generate large revenues and wealth withi...
We predictably believe that immense natural resources would generate large revenues and wealth withi...
Oil production in Nigeria is often believed to bring economic failure, political instability, the in...
The study of the link between natural resources and conflict results from the fact that many countri...
This investigation inspects the contemporary Niger Delta crisis and its socioeconomic problems, as w...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...
This paper examines the nature of the natural resource curse in Nigeria. The country has actively en...
This work seeks to interpret resource curse on the African Continent by analyzing three separate cas...
The emergence of the exploration of crude oil in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria, has awarded the re...
AbstractRethinking the Resource Curse:Natural Resources and Polywar in the Ituri District, Democrati...
The cataclysms in much of the post 1990 natural resource exploitation in the Niger Delta which ampli...
This paper explores the political economy of resource curse with the view of appreciating the develo...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Countries endowed with natural resources such as Nigeria have been susceptible to economic underdeve...
We predictably believe that immense natural resources would generate large revenues and wealth withi...
We predictably believe that immense natural resources would generate large revenues and wealth withi...
Oil production in Nigeria is often believed to bring economic failure, political instability, the in...
The study of the link between natural resources and conflict results from the fact that many countri...
This investigation inspects the contemporary Niger Delta crisis and its socioeconomic problems, as w...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...
This paper examines the nature of the natural resource curse in Nigeria. The country has actively en...
This work seeks to interpret resource curse on the African Continent by analyzing three separate cas...
The emergence of the exploration of crude oil in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria, has awarded the re...
AbstractRethinking the Resource Curse:Natural Resources and Polywar in the Ituri District, Democrati...
The cataclysms in much of the post 1990 natural resource exploitation in the Niger Delta which ampli...
This paper explores the political economy of resource curse with the view of appreciating the develo...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...