The thrust of the paper is to examine the relationship between political socialization and political culture in crystallizing the process of nation building in Nigerian society. The developmental implications of the synergy provided drive for the paper. The paper argued that nationalism encouraged national consciousness and unity that made it possible for the nationalist leaders to emancipate Nigerian society from the shackles of colonialism. Thus, their failure to sustain nationalism on attainment of political independence in 1960, accounted for the inability of the nationalist leaders to mobilize the citizenry through political socialization to evolve right political culture supportive of the political system. This phenomenon created the ...
A general point of consensus among many Nigerians is that the nation's development as a political en...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
The thrust of the paper is to examine the relationship between political socialization and political...
The thrust of the paper is to examine the relationship between political socialization and political...
In 1960, when the country gained independence from colonial Britain, analysts had predicted rapid de...
Political discourse on the concept of nationalism has been widely based on theoretical perspectives ...
This dissertation explores the relationship between ethnicity and nation-building and nationalism in...
Heterogeneous societies have an arduous task of wielding together their often divergent values and i...
Looking at nation building as “the desire and effort to achieve unity among multiethnic groups...
The study is a contribution to the existing studies on the effects of ethno-nationalist identity on ...
This paper focuses on the politico-cultural explanation for the failure of Nigeria to replicate and ...
The colonization of what is now known as Nigeria had created lot of developmental and leadership cha...
This article examined the effect of Nigeria's political culture on its nascent democracy. Drawing on...
This paper is an inquiry into the impact of ethnic nationalism on the Nigerian nascent democracy. Da...
A general point of consensus among many Nigerians is that the nation's development as a political en...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
The thrust of the paper is to examine the relationship between political socialization and political...
The thrust of the paper is to examine the relationship between political socialization and political...
In 1960, when the country gained independence from colonial Britain, analysts had predicted rapid de...
Political discourse on the concept of nationalism has been widely based on theoretical perspectives ...
This dissertation explores the relationship between ethnicity and nation-building and nationalism in...
Heterogeneous societies have an arduous task of wielding together their often divergent values and i...
Looking at nation building as “the desire and effort to achieve unity among multiethnic groups...
The study is a contribution to the existing studies on the effects of ethno-nationalist identity on ...
This paper focuses on the politico-cultural explanation for the failure of Nigeria to replicate and ...
The colonization of what is now known as Nigeria had created lot of developmental and leadership cha...
This article examined the effect of Nigeria's political culture on its nascent democracy. Drawing on...
This paper is an inquiry into the impact of ethnic nationalism on the Nigerian nascent democracy. Da...
A general point of consensus among many Nigerians is that the nation's development as a political en...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...