2017
DOI: 10.1002/jid.3287
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Understanding Organised Violence and Crime in Political Settlements: Oil Wars, Petro‐Criminality and Amnesty in the Niger Delta

Abstract: The relationship between political settlements and organised violence and crime in the contemporary developing world is little understood. Analysing the oil wars and massive oil theft in the Niger delta of Nigeria in the first decade after the transition to civilian‐electoral rule in 1999, this article shows that (i) organised violence is not exogenous to political settlements and their (re)production and does not always destabilise them; and (ii) organised criminal activities associated with the generation of… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Different organisations or groups with the greatest ‘holding power’– defined as ‘the capability of an individual or group to engage and survive in conflicts’ (Khan, 2010: 6) – can succeed over others at different points in time. This means the shape of the political settlement, and, thus, of development, can be explained historically through dynamic processes of coalition formation through which new structures of authority, culture and norms emerge (Schultze-Kraft, 2017).…”
Section: Conceptual Framework: Social Brokerage and Urban Frontiersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different organisations or groups with the greatest ‘holding power’– defined as ‘the capability of an individual or group to engage and survive in conflicts’ (Khan, 2010: 6) – can succeed over others at different points in time. This means the shape of the political settlement, and, thus, of development, can be explained historically through dynamic processes of coalition formation through which new structures of authority, culture and norms emerge (Schultze-Kraft, 2017).…”
Section: Conceptual Framework: Social Brokerage and Urban Frontiersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The oil rents have been mostly misappropriated and used for political settlement between Nigerian oil actors and ruling elites. Schultze-Kraft (2013) contends that Nigerian oil actors (including top bureaucrats, political [party] leaders and ‘godfathers’, business moguls, retired military officers, Nigerian and international oil industry bosses) have vested interests in promoting or increasing their interests in Nigeria’s ‘oil sector’, which is lubricated via political settlement. Over many years, oil and the appropriation of oil rents by Nigerian oil actors and their international oil business partners have shaped this settlement (Ikein, 1990).…”
Section: The Rentier State and Covid-19 Containment Responsesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Underlying the Niger Delta DDR Program is the state's use of monetary incentives to negotiate peace with the insurgents and to create an environment conducive to oil production (Agbiboa, ; Ajayi & Adesote, ; Davidheiser & Nyiayaana, ; Eke, ; Obi, ; B. Okonofua, ; Schultze‐Kraft, ; Ushie, ). Because the state was under pressure to increase its oil output, it presented the peace program as “renegotiation of the prevailing political settlement geared at protecting the economic and political interests of powerful elites,” rather than a genuine peacebuilding intervention (Schultze‐Kraft, , p. 621). The strategy of buying peace from insurgents, while successful in re‐establishing oil production, fails to address the root of the problem (Agbiboa, ; Aghedo, ; Davidheiser & Nyiayaana, ; Ushie, ).…”
Section: The Context Of Nigeria's Ddr Programmentioning
confidence: 99%