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Title
Foreign policy process of Nigeria The foreign policy process of Nigeria |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7148 |
Date
1986 |
Author(s)
Oparah, Obioma Philip |
Abstract
This study of the foreign policy process of Nigeria explains
how the country's foreign policy is made and the environmental
setting in which it is made. It argues that in spite of domestic
political crises and major changes in government, the process of
making foreign policy has settled into discernible patterns and
exemplifies a stable body of principles. Nigeria has an active
environment (domestic and external) for policy making, as
illustrated by the array of sources and types of input into policy
making on virtually every external issue. The actual making of
foreign policy is done by the executive: - the Presidency - Federal
Executive Council - Ministry of External Affairs - etc., and it
passes through the process from initiation to consideration, decision,
implementation and evaluation, involving a series of consultations
with both governmental and non-governmental agencies. Case studies
are used to illustrate the argument that foreign policy making in
Nigeria is a collective responsibility in the sense of the
participation of many organs of government in the process and the
outcome depends on the policy makers' perception of both the given
issue and the prevailing circumstances in the domestic and external
environments of Nigeria.
Contrary to the impression about political processes in developing
countries, it argues that Nigeria's foreign policy process is not
very different from that of developed countries. If there is a
significant difference, it lies in the amount of information and
resources put into policy making, which reflect in the content of
policy while the process is basically the same. Unlike the
capitalist and communist states, Nigeria's foreign policy is not
necessarily based on pure calculation of advantages or how to
exploit the weakness of friendly countries. It is rather a
long term policy of mutual co-operation and assistance. Its
practice, contrary to the views of its critics has been of
a high profile and purposeful. |
Subject(s)
Political; science; Public; administration; Economics |
Language
eng |
Publisher
University of Edinburgh |
Type of publication
PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf |
Identifier
370878 |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2022-08-22;11:49:56 |
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