Tuesday, 23 April 2013

NATIONAL INTERGRATION, NATION SECURTIY AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION: THEROLE OF A TEACHER EDUCATION


Paper presented by Solomon Selcap Dalung at the fifth North East Zone Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) Conference at Umar Suleiman College Education Gashua, Yobe State on the 7th November 2012.

Foremost it delights me much for the honour done me as one chosen to share with colleagues ideas at this prestigious assembly COEASU, organized to cross pollinate experiences with the aim of rejuvenating key actors in the education industry of the geo-political North East Zone under the theme: National Integration, National Security and Conflict Resolution, the role of Teacher Education.

The choice of this theme could not have been more appropriate than now taking into consideration the national challenges the Nation is undergoing. More appropriate also is the chosen audience, a critical constituent responsible for catalyzing social consciousness. As custodians, I concurred with the organizers in the choice of the theme and desire that in the final analysis the results will be utilized for the benefits of mankind.

In doing justice to this herculean task, I have adopted a conventional classroom method which my audience are familiar with hence can navigate the academic storm with me easily.

Introduction:
Unfolding developments Nigeria in contemporary times have generated debates within political, academic and legal parlance about future of Nigerian the federation. Of utmost concern is proliferating regime of violent crimes, religious and ethnic tension. Consequently, economic and social activities have been in comatose in most commercial cities thereby justifying the basis of the debate that the state of union is in near jeopardy. Security challenges have dominated every national discourse. The insurgent question has been so much exaggerated and mystified that phobia and mutual suspicion determines every aspect of public relationships. The capacity of the state to contend with these challenges obviously is below citizens expectations.

Analysts and Public Commentators held varied opinions about its origin. According to Proffessor Ali Mazuiri, Amongst the things that trigger the shariah advocacy in some northern state of Nigeria, was the resentment of being at the periphery of Nigerian politics and power configuration. There were points when the northern leaders held sway politically in the power configuration, but the 1999 elections, saw the balance of power shifting south without any remarkable transformation in the economics of the north. Hence, the politics of shariah advocacy was part of a protest against regional economic in equalities existing in Nigeria (Mazrui 2001:3).

On the contrary, it considered from a religious perspective as an Islamic machine islamization of Nigeria. The latter School is popular among some Christians while the former is a political theory orchestrated mostly by a segment of Southern elites. Either way the situation is assessed; the nation is in a dilemma as a result of ravaging hunger, poverty, unemployment, corruption that is responsible partly for insecurity. The summary of these traumatic trends explains the agitation for a National Sovereign Conference, (NSC) as a way of resolving certain national questions.

National integration is central to fostering cohesive security consciousness among citizens to guarantee territorial integrity, while strategies employ for amicable reconciliation of contending interests within a social system is germane to attaining national ideals. In realizing the above, what will be the role of the midwife of social consciousness, the teacher? To my understanding, this explains the motive of our gathering here.

Conceptualization:
National Integration is a very broad statement. To achieve national integration, the nation must pool human resources like cultural, religious, scientific, natural, educational etc, to achieve oneness in all spheres of life of the citizens so that progress can be achieved. With progress, the citizens can enjoy fruits of prosperity and happiness, living in harmony irrespective of the creed, language and cultural leanings professed by each as individuals.

National integration is the awareness of a common identity amongst the citizens of a country. It means that though we belong to different castes, religions and regions and speak different languages we recognize the fact that we are all one. This kind of integration is very important in the building of a strong and prosperous nation. The integration of multicultural groups into larger pan-local identities is at the heart of the idea of national integration. A brief definition of a nation is important for an understanding of national integration. A nation is a ‘large social group integrated by a combination of objective relationships (economic, political, linguistic, cultural, religious, geographic historical) and their reflection subjective in collective consciousness’ (Hoch 1996).

It has also been seen as an expression of ‘large-scale solidarity, constituted by the feeling of the sacrifices that one has made in the past and of those that one is prepared to make in the future.’ 
Both definitions underscore Renan (1996) and Handler (1998) ideas that the nation is a ‘daily plebiscite,’ and a ‘continuous’ entity, that ‘constitutes a broad framework of interaction beyond specific sub-national identities. ‘These diverse linguistic, cultural and religious groups into broader entities are one of the most dominant features in the formation of nations. Multi-ethnicity is the rule rather than the exception, for there are virtually few nations   (perhaps with the possible exception of Somalia) constituted by a single ethnic group. Second, and hinging on the first reason, nations have a historical past however tenuous that past may be: shared myths, culture, language, or a common colonial experience. Third, there is often a territory or ancestral land serving as a ‘marker’ distinguishing one nation from others. Fourth, and finally, some level of communication, industrial development, and progress help to hasten the ‘blending’ process.

Applying these contextually so as to capture the true condition of Nigeria prior to1960 political independence Anderson (1983) stated thus “Nigeria is not a nation. It is a mere geographical expression. There are no “Nigerians” in the same sense as there are “English,” “Welsh” or “French.” The word ‘Nigerian’ is merely a distinctive appellation to distinguish those who live within the boundaries of Nigeria from those who do not”
Arguing along this line Clifford Imasuen states that “More than the past a number of decades, Nigerians have sought to create cheap printing company. Nevertheless, the nation constructing process has been largely difficult by Nigeria’s tremendous ethnic diversity and uneven distribution of resource. Since independence in 1960, the geographical expression known as Nigeria has striven without success to bring together the diverse ethnic nationalities into a single” When people speak of Nigeria derisively as an ‘accident,’ they could not, in some sense, have been more correct in their descriptions. All nations are in some sense ‘accidents ‘of history, ‘imagined communities ‘that could potentially develop broad national spaces by subsuming sub-national spaces.

These statements captured the true condition of Nigeria prior to 1960 when political independence was obtained. There has been no any positive change in this regard since then. Instead, the relationship among the constituent ethnic nationalities and religious groups has worsened drastically in spite of all pretenses to the contrary. Nigeria is not an ethnically homogeneous society, having come into being accidentally, as it were, as a product of British imperialism. Today, rather than integrating into a cohesive community with a common sense of national identity and destiny, citizens of Nigeria are returning more and more to primordial affiliations for identity, loyalty and security. Instead of forging a united front and presenting a concerted effort to face the challenges of development in an increasingly competitive and globalised world, Nigerians are busy waging ethnic and religious wars, struggling for control over resources, resisting marginalization by dominant ethnic groups, and contending with diverse problems of basic survival. (Ekanola 2006)

The point thus is that nations neither drop from the sky, nor are they natural. People, through conscious, purposive activity construct nations; national integration is conscious process of social engineering. The process of construction of national integration takes different forms depending on which specific historical variable that dominated the sub national communities to emerge as the nuclei of solid national political and economic organization. The characteristics of such broad national communities are distinguishable by the followings, internationally recognized geographical boundaries, a fairly   common if broad cultural and linguistic ethos, an identifiable feeling of belonging, and a state. According to (Rokkan (1972) and Yinger (1980), Mechanisms and methods for ‘blending’ multi-ethnic identities into national political communities sharing a common identity are numerous. The followings have been identified, religion.

Whichever factor determines the construction of national integration depends on its relationship with other factors within specific historical interaction. Little wonder Tunde (1991) contended that “Many [Nigerians] deceive themselves by thinking that Nigeria is one….This is wrong. I am sorry to say that this presence of unity is artificial. Adding weight to this Kuna (2005) stated that “In some contexts, religion became a rallying point in the formation of pan-local communities; in others, it was trade; in others it was war and coercion; yet again, it was any combination of these forces in other contexts.
The British had in 1899 revoked the charter of the Royal Niger Company. By 1914, it completed the process of bringing together several hundreds of ethnic, linguistic and cultural groups and communities which then had attained different levels of economic and political development. These strategies produced a state structure that was to become the servant of imperialism and all those metropolitan interests which owned their existence of the continuance of imperialism (Elekwe 1986)

The failure of the colonial powers to graft such desirable aspects of the past on to the present rather than super-impose their own experiences on us and our perpetration of this practice in the post independence period has in part led us into the quagmire of governmental instability. It is needless to reiterate the fact that such instability has diverted our attention from the fundamental goal of ensuring a better life for our populace. (Obasanjo 1989).

The Nigeria ruling class inherited this state structure without any form of modification or moderation. They rather became so preoccupied with the use of the state paraphernalia for accumulating surplus without through the processes of producing surplus. The resultant contradiction was an institutionalized myopic and visionless ethnic centered leadership with separatist and particularistic political outlook.  (Nnoli, 1979)

In a nutshell, the construction of the Nigerian nation was fashioned not in the overall interest of sub national communities rather as a service centre of the departing imperial political community. Bye and large the emerging indigenous leadership compounded the situation by monopolizing ethnic and regional values against entrenching a national political community. Consequently, the political instability and social unrest characterized national landscape.
There is no gainsaying that at the heart of the Nigerian problem is not only the complex ethnic configuration but the mismanagement of national focus by leadership over a period of time. Instead of concentrating on building a national political community on the strength of diverse values as formidable basis for progress, parochial material accumulation has replaced patroticism in leadership.

Regardless of these challenges, the country has not disintegrated due to the invaluable sacrifices of noble compatriots galvanized by elastic citizenship tolerance. Of course these safe guards have limitation that requires constant service with justice and equity. Where leadership fail to reciprocate these goodwill, rather embark of faulting the system, then there will be adverse implication on national integration.

National Security:
Like most concepts there is no generally accepted definition of National Security based of varying opinions on the components of a nation state. The differences in thinking of Scholars and Analysts varied about conceptualization of National Security which provide an overview of multiple usages of these words. The concept still remains ambiguous, having originated from simpler definitions which initially emphasized the freedom from military threat and political coercion to later increase in sophistication and include other forms of non-military security as suited the circumstances of the time.   (Romm, 1993).
Macmillan Dictionary defines National Security as "the protection or the safety of a country’s secrets and its citizens" emphasizing the overall security of a nation and a nation state.
 In 1943, Walter Lippmann defined it in terms of war saying that "a nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war, and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war". Later, in 1950, a political scientist, Harold Lasswell conceived National Security from similar perspective of external coercion: "The distinctive meaning of national security means freedom from foreign dictation”.  
While recognizing the need to segregate the subjectivity of the conceptual idea from the objectivity, Arnold Wolfers in 1960, talks of threats to acquired values: "An ambiguous symbol meaning different things to different people. National security objectively means the absence of threats to acquired values and subjectively, the absence of fear that such values will be attacked." (Paleri, 2008).

The National Defence College of India in 1996 identify the elements of national power thus: "National security is an appropriate and aggressive blend of political resilience and maturity, human resources, economic structure and capacity, technological competence, industrial base and availability of natural resources and finally the military might” (ibid)
In Harvard, History Professor, Charles Maier defined National Security through the lens of national power when he argued that "National security... is best described as a capacity to control those domestic and foreign conditions that the public opinion of a given community believes necessary to enjoy its own self-determination or autonomy, prosperity and wellbeing."(Maier, 1990)

However, National security refers to the requirement to maintain the survival of the state through the use of economic, diplomacy, power projection and political power. These encompass a broad range of facets which includes the non military or economic security of the nation and the values espoused by the national Political Community. Accordingly, in order to possess national security, a nation needs to possess economic security, energy security, environmental security, etc. Security threats involve not only conventional foes such as other nation-states but also non-state actors such as violent non-state actors, narcotic cartels, multinational corporations and non-governmental organizations; some authorities include natural disasters and events causing severe environmental damage in this category. Measures taken to ensure national security include: using diplomacy to rally allies and isolate threats, marshalling economic power to facilitate or compel cooperation, maintaining effective armed forces, implementing civil defense and emergency preparedness measures (including anti-terrorism legislation), ensuring the resilience and redundancy of critical infrastructure, using intelligence services to detect and defeat or avoid threats and espionage, and to protect classified information, using counterintelligence services or secret police to protect the nation from internal threats. (Supra)

Analyzing critical components of national security General Maxwell Taylor in 1974 has this to say “The national valuables in this broad sense include current assets and national interests, as well as the sources of strength upon which our future as a nation depends. Some valuables are tangible and earthy; others are spiritual or intellectual. They range widely from political assets such as the Bill of Rights, our political institutions and international friendships, to many economic assets which radiate worldwide from a highly productive domestic economy supported by rich natural resources. It is the urgent need to protect valuables such as these which legitimizes and makes essential the role of national security”.

Limiting our scope contextually to Nigerian situation and reviewing the concepts above leaves the mind puzzle whether basically National Security is not only an academic exercise. There is no gain saying that the collapsed of national values has destroyed national interest which primarily serves as motivating drives of nationalism. Without the spirit of nationalism it is impossible to evolve a dependable theory of National security.
The bane of nationalistic values revolves round institutional decay in leadership. Overtime leadership as trust has been re-constructed to reflect the personal interest of repository of state power. Consequently, resources meant for advancement of the system are redirected to service huge but unjustifiable security budgets.  Apart from these wastages, the conduct of leadership has been counterproductive to values that encourage nationalism and by extension re-enforcing national insecurity. Corruption has dominated the national psyche so much so that it looks unusual to stand against it.
Looting of public treasury as negative culture has contributed to destruction of sense of togetherness which has inflicted colossal damage to common national interest. In fact what is considered national interest is mere reflection of whims and caprices of the ruling class which monopolize instrument of coercion for protection of group hegemony. Officially, in every segments of our National political community poverty, hunger and youth unemployment has been domesticated through discredited Poverty Eradication or Empowerment Programmes which are mere conduits for siphoning national wealth. The rate of citizens surviving beyond the poverty margin is quite outrageous while government continues to give lips service to this raving social menace.

In the circumstance instability determines the context of social relationships and to my mind it explains succinctly the current security challenges confronting the nation. The poor management of the security situation can be viewed from this perspective or better still it may be provoked by unanticipated panic of inept leadership. The reduction of the concept of national security to mobilization of force to embark on rampage by destruction of lives and properties of innocent citizen defeats the essence.
The imperative of effective security measures must crystallized into intelligence networking consolidated within the good will of citizenry which in turn define the scope of engagements. There must be collaboration between the security system and the community as basis for confronting any security challenge; anything below this margin will tilt the balance in favour of insurgency.

The excesses of security agencies in handling challenges leaves much to desire whether war has been declared on the country by its own security service. Nauseating reports of extra judicial massacre by those engaged to restore normalcy has completely destroyed the spirit of national integration. This pitiable scenario had facilitated sub national consciousness where people in affected areas considered themselves to be under siege by the Nigerian authorities. It is necessary the Federal Government re-appraise the impact of engagement of the military in internal security operations otherwise the consequences on developing a national political community and democracy will be compromised.

Conflict Resolution:
Conflict resolution is a set of ideas and ways to reduce sources of conflict. The term conflict resolution is sometimes used interchangeably with the term dispute resolution. The terms conflict and dispute overlap. As a term, conflict is broader than dispute, more concerned with physical action, and less concerned with verbal arguments. Processes of conflict resolution generally include negotiation, mediation, and diplomacy. The processes of arbitration, litigation, and formal complaint processes such as ombudsman processes, are usually described with the term dispute resolution, although some refer to them as conflict resolution.

Conflict resolution is conceptualized as the methods and processes involved in facilitating the peaceful ending of conflict. Often, committed group members attempt to resolve group conflicts by actively communicating information about their conflicting motives or ideologies to the rest of the group (e.g., intentions; reasons for holding certain beliefs, and by engaging in collective negotiation. (Forsyth, 2009). 

It may be important to note that the term conflict resolution may also be used interchangeably with dispute resolution, where arbitration and litigation processes are critically involved. Furthermore, the concept of conflict resolution can be thought to encompass the use of nonviolent resistance measures by conflicted parties in an attempt to promote effective resolution.(Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton, 2009)

Conflict management is often considered to be distinct from conflict resolution. In order for actual conflict to occur, there should be an expression of exclusive patterns, and tell why the conflict was expressed the way it was. Conflict is not just about simple inaptness, but is often connected to a previous issue. The latter refers to resolving the dispute to the approval of one or both parties, whereas the former concerns an ongoing process that may never have a resolution. Neither is it considered the same as conflict transformation, which seeks to reframe the positions of the conflict parties.(ibid)
Conflict management refers to the long-term management of intractable conflicts. It is the label for the variety of ways by which people handle grievances standing up for what they consider to be right and against what they consider to be wrong. Those ways include such diverse phenomena as gossip, ridicule, lynching, terrorism, warfare, feuding, genocide, law, mediation, and avoidance. Which forms of conflict management will be used in any given situation can be somewhat predicted and explained by the social structure or social geometry of the case.(supra)
In any organized social community conflict seems to be a fact of life. We have all seen situations where different people with different goals and needs have come into conflict. And we have often witnessed intense personal animosity that can result into conflict. The fact that conflict exists, however, is not necessarily a bad thing, as long as it is resolved effectively, it can lead to personal and professional growth. However, the neglect or mismanagement of conflict situation may have adverse consequences on social harmony and economic advancement.
In many cases, effective conflict resolution can make the difference between positive and negative outcomes. The good news is that by resolving conflict successfully it can solve many of the problems that it has brought to the surface, as well as getting benefits that you might not at first expect.

Having consider what conflict resolution connotes, it will be proper to locate it within social context. Contemporary conflict indices in this country are multi faceted, ranging from poverty, hunger, unemployment which manifest into conflict situations like socio religious, ethnic or sectarian crisis or general insecurity. This phenomenon has generated leadership burden so much that some scholars and foreign nations have predicted the collapse of the nation in no distant future. It is not the presence of conflict that is of concern but the capacity to manage it.

So many years back the country started manifesting malignant symptoms of this current situation. However, weak citizenship political consciousness was exploited by manipulating sentiments to create divisions. It also contributed to gradual erosion of value system with collapse of reward system. With these scenarios, the stage was ripe for corruption and other leadership vices to dominate public responsibilities. While the current democratic enterprise has produce a self-style imposed and deceptive leaders, who lead by deception and create Islamic revivalism to mobilize and capture cheap support by claiming to be introducing Islamic legal principles a midst missive collapse of services, poverty, failed governance, absence of social justice and a fair electoral process which produced consensus candidates that lack legitimacy. Corrupt and power hungry politicians, who hijacked votes and self imposed leaders, declare billions of fictitious amounts of naira as assets only to be recouped as investments through falsification and over pricing of contracts awards, in spite of the existence of framework of due process and diligence in contract awards and procurement. (Loimeier, 2003).

Leadership became personified with parochial scope to national development rather projection of family interest displaced national interest. Consequently, ideal leadership became liquidated through the hijacked of the state power under a pseudo democratic atmosphere which recycle bad leadership via discredited or sometimes massively rigged polls. Even though Nigeria pride itself as belongs to democratic societies it has not been able to organize a credible election which is fundamental to survival of democracy.
Of course taking analysis of events that characterized the political landscape and gauging same with the volatile atmosphere, it is manifest that conflict situation exist within the polity. The culture of denial common within official circle is mere defence. 

No wonder, the state of frustration created by lack of good governance has provoked debates on the sustainability of the 1914 unholy political matrimony of the Northern and Southern protectorates. It will be in the interest of national harmony to focus on the process of national reconciliation instead of the disintegration theory. It cannot be better alternative in view of the fact bad leadership culture is the bane.  Even if balkanization succeeds little progress will be recorded because leadership virus will still infect the new nations with more severe symptoms than what we are passing through now.

Obvious, absence of leadership and injustice has contributed greatly in exaggerating the state of insecurity bedeviling the country. There are rampant incidences of militancy, arm robbery, kidnapping, rape, hostage taking cross the nation with the unengaged productive segment of the social system patronizing these negative vices. No single moment is idle without report of any of the above. Of course, there will be no need for oracle consultation to arrive at scientific conclusion that the country is enjoying the grace of time to explode. It may look simple to ignore the symptoms but certainly not the consequences.

Closely related to the conflict paradigm is the theory of collapse of political institutions which naturally safeguards democratic culture for evolution of leadership. The inability of our electoral system to guarantee credible elections is at the centre of generating vote of no confidence in this democratic dispensation. At any general elections, the process become glaringly manipulated by either ballot stuffing, violence, alteration of figures, declaration of losers or sometimes outright rigging backed by state apparatus. In the final analysis dissatisfaction is provoked by shameless ballot stealing which from the immediate experience received the anger of the people. Therefore, discredited electoral process is also a form of conflict within our political context.
Addressing these conflict situations requires radical social surgery of leadership with the determination to lay solid base for peace and harmony. Leadership is a burden which must not be sacrifice for political convenience even when it is clear that the figure under consideration may lack the capacity to pilot state affairs. Severe sanctions including death penalty is hereby recommended as one the method for reconciling corruption conflict which is the bane of our progress.

It is my opinion that election criminals including official collaborators within the system deserve the same penalty like corruption. There should be special courts created constitutionally to handle such cases to enhance speedy trials, while such verdicts should be executed within the soonest possible time after expiration of right of appeal. This will in no small measure serve as deterrence to would be offenders.
Governments at all levels must confront poverty, hunger and unemployment frontally and discontinue the culture of lip service. These vices are potential tsunamis that can generate social convulsion capable of up surging national stability. Job creation must be sincerely prioritized with dogged commitments to erecting formidable employment generation mechanism which will accommodate the restive constituency.

THE ROLE OF TEACHER EDUCATION:

As catalyst of social consciousness in every society, the teacher is a critical variable in attaining national development. The contributions of teachers in social progress cannot be adequately remunerated by any government. May be it is the basis for the adage that teachers reward are in heaven. It sound quite ridiculous but in practice it has influenced the psyche of policy makers that sometimes nonpayment of wages is sought to be explained by this adage. who then is a teacher?
A teacher is a person who provides education for pupils (children) and students (adults). The role of teacher is often formal and ongoing, carried within a school environment or other place of formal education. In many countries, teachers must first obtain specified professional qualifications or credentials from recognized university or college. These professional qualifications may include the study of pedagogy, which is the science of teaching. Teachers, like other professionals, may have to continue their education after they qualify, a process known as continuing professional development.
The role of teachers vary among cultures which may include provision of  instructions in literacy and numeracy, craftsmanship or vocational training, the arts, religion, civics, community roles, or life skills.

In some countries, formal education can take place through home schooling. Informal learning may be assisted by a teacher occupying a transient or ongoing role, such as a family member, or by anyone with knowledge or skills in the wider community setting.
In other words a teacher is a social engineer who re-constructs human minds in order to assume future roles. Without the teacher there can be no modern leadership.

In Nigeria currently, the status of a teacher best suits the wheel barrow theory. The role of the teacher is that of a mere tool for the convenience of budgetary allocations that are diverted by political leadership without impunity. The school system is so discouraging that the teacher is reduced to security guard who report daily to a place designated as place of learning. At whatever level, it does not require an oracle to identify a teacher because his personality is herald by intimidating poverty. Even when he dutifully demonstrates unqualified commitments to his responsibilities the working environment is unbearable hostile yet the Nigerian teacher remains unshakable in the performance of his role. Where is the saying that you cannot kill the goose that lay the golden eggs?

This state of affairs is a threat to the very definition of peace. If the social process that guarantee hope for the future is caricature of itself then what is the motivational drive for submission to it. The learning environment must not only be conducive but fascinating to project hope. It remains great mystery the attitude of leadership towards education, even when teachers find themselves in leadership positions they had performed worst than non teachers. Under their administrations as either Ministers or Commissioners for education, industrial strikes flourish incomparable to any period. And can it be imagine being normal for either Ministers or Commissioners for education to send their children to foreign or private schools yet he pretends to be presiding over the educational industry, what an irony?

The net effects of all these explains the level of decay that characterized the society. If the foundation of the system is faulty certainly no miracle should be expected from the end products. The lamentable state of affairs made it impossible for the role teacher education to be functional. This development has plunged the nation into so many questions including the security challenges. Of course the solution does not lay in the militarization of society rather a sincere and conscious reflection on where we missed our steps in search of nation hood which in my opinion includes the neglect of education. It is only then that the role of teacher education will impact positively in addressing key development and security issues.

CONCLUSION:
In terminating this discuss, I will employ the experience of one of the leading world powers to drive home my theory of returning back to the drawing board. During the Second World War, chemical weapons were dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan which reduced it to rumbles. After the war the survivors resolved that they were going to spend every sources at their disposal on education to build the people that will build a new Japan. Fifty years later Japan is a world power.

The argument among leaders that fifty two years of independent is too young for Nigeria to make any meaningful progress is mere justification for leadership failure. The misplacement of budgetary priorities must be reverse in favour of education and until then the role of teacher education remains inconsequential.

Therefore, Iam calling on governments at all levels to allocate thirty (30%) percent of annual budgetary allocations to education. Not only that, but education should be placed on first line charge for availability of funds for rapid development. The national curriculum on education must be restructured to accommodate certain positive traditional values so as to make it functional. The mechanism for realizing national integration, security and conflict resolution can only be found in a solid and viable educational system where the teacher is an indispensable factor. Anything contrary to this leaves the nation with severe consequences of social instability.

Thank you for your audience.


References:

1. Nigeria in Comparative Perspective” - www.gamji.com. Accessed March 2001.

2. Hroch, Miroslav. 1996. From National Movement to the Fully-formed Nation: The Nation-building Process in Europe.
Mapping the Nation (Gopal Balakrihsnan Ed.) New York and London: Verso, 1996, 78-97.

3. Renan Ernest (1966) “What is a Nation? Becoming National”: A Reader (Geoff Eleyand Ronald Grigor Suny (Eds.) New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 41-55.

4. Handler Richard, (1988) “Nationalism and the Politics of Culture in Quebec: New Directions in Anthropological Writing. History, Poetics, and Cultural Criticism” George E and James M. Clifford Eds.), Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. 6-8.
Anderson Benedict (1983) “Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spred of Nationalism”, London and New York: Verso

6. Clifford Isioma Imasuen, “National Integration a Historical Perspective”, webmaster @ http://www.clifford.s5.com. Assessed 23rd July 2012.

7. Rokkan Stein (1972) “Models and Methods in the Comparative Study on Nation Building, Imagination and Precision in the Social Sciences”: Essays in Memory of Peter Nettle (T. J. Nossiter, A. H. Hanson, and Stein Rokkan Eds.). 121-156. New York: Humanities Press 1972).
8. Yinger, J. M. (1980) “Religion in the struggle for Power,” New York: Arnold Press), commerce and war (Tilly, Charles, Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 990-1990, Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
9. Tunde Babawale, “The Poverty of Leadership”, This Week, October 7, 1991, p.30.
Mohammed Kuna j. “Religion, Identity, and National Integration in Nigeria”,Paper Presented at a Round Table on National Integration in Nigeria Organized by the National Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies, Kuru, Jos,July 15th, 2005.
10. Ekekwe E. (1986) “Class and Slate in Nigeria”, Longman Lagos, London.

11. Olusegun Obasanjo, (1989) “Constitution for National Integration and Development” www.africanleadership.org. assessed 13th September 2012.

12.Nnoli, O.(1979), Ethnic Politics in Nigeria, Fourth Dimension, Enugu Nigeria.
Romm, Joseph J. (1993). “Defining national security: the nonmilitary aspects. Pew Project on America's Task in a Changed World (Pew Project Series). Council on Foreign Relations. pp. 122.

13.Adebola Babatunde Ekanola, (2006), “National Integration and the Survival of Nigeria in the 21st Century”, University of Ibadan, The Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies,Volume 31, Number 3, Fall 2006.
Macmillan Dictionary (online version), Macmillan Publishers Limited. Accessed 22 September 2012.

14. Paleri, Prabhakaran (2008). National Security: Imperatives And Challenges. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill.

15. Maier, Charles S. Peace and security for the 1990s.Unpublished paper for the MacArthur Fellowship Program, Social Science Research Council, 12 Jun 1990. As quoted in Romm 199

16. Harold Lassel, (1996).National Defence College, Tees January Marg, New Delhi, India. Quoted in Paleri, 2008 (ibid).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_security. Assessed on 15th September 2012.


18.  Forsyth, D. R. (2009). Group dynamics (5th ed.). Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Col.
Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash (eds.), Civil Resistance and Power Politics: The Experience of Non-violent Action from Gandhi to the Present, Oxford University Press, 2009.

19. LOIMEIER, R., 2007; Nigeria: The Quest for a Viable Religious Option. In W. F. S. Miles, (Ed) Political Islam in West Africa: State Society Relations Transformed. London, Lynne Rienner. 38



No comments:

Post a Comment