Abstract
Studies on farmer-herder conflicts using the Critical Discourse Approach often focus on media portrayals of the conflict. However, the interplay between discursive constructions by primordial or ethnic associations, their dissemination through the media, and their potential effects on the conflict remain underexplored. Therefore, this paper examines the potential effects of the primordially driven discourses on farmer-herder crises in Nigeria. Discourses from civil society on farmer-herder violence in Nigeria hold the potential for two key outcomes: the escalation of the conflict and the creation of doubts about the state’s capacity and impartiality in addressing the violence, leading to calls for restructuring the security architecture to include non-formal security options. Employing Critical Discourse Analysis, the paper examines statements from major ethnic associations across 30 Nigerian online news articles, assessing their role in shaping public perceptions of violence and influencing civil society advocacy for alternative security mechanisms. This paper demonstrates how these narratives can intensify tensions, undermine trust in state security institutions, and, in addition, enable the prioritisation of ethnic biases over constructive dialogue, posing challenges to resolving these violent conflicts. The findings highlight the importance of fostering inclusive and neutral discourse to promote civility and mitigate the worsening of farmer-herder violence.
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Conflict of interest: The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.
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Research funding: This paper did not receive any funding.
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Disclosure: Declaration: All individuals listed as authors in this paper qualify to be so, and have approved the submitted version. This paper is original and is not under consideration for publication by any other journal. We have duly acknowledged our sources and no previously published material used in this work requires a special permission for use in our kind of work.
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- The Four Causes Revisited: A Scholastic Framework for Analyzing Human Affairs
- A Qualitative Longitudinal Study on the Adaptation and Coping Strategies of Men with Testicular Cancer
- The Review of Female’s Intrasexual Competition of Birth and Motherhood in Digital Media
- Farmer-Herder Crises, Uncivil Discourses and the Politics of Nigeria’s Security Responses
- The Journey of Interest: Philosophical and Ethical Development from Ancient Rejection to the Modern Financial Crisis
- On the Need to Rethink the Way We Understand Growth: Media Evidence on Economic Growth as an Empty Signifier
- Understanding Predictors of Trust in Science Among University Students: Examining Scientific Reasoning, Cognitive Reflection, Education, and Personal Experiences with the Scientific Community
- The Moderating Role of Gender in Perceived Discrimination Levels and Political Participation of Turkish Women
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- The Four Causes Revisited: A Scholastic Framework for Analyzing Human Affairs
- A Qualitative Longitudinal Study on the Adaptation and Coping Strategies of Men with Testicular Cancer
- The Review of Female’s Intrasexual Competition of Birth and Motherhood in Digital Media
- Farmer-Herder Crises, Uncivil Discourses and the Politics of Nigeria’s Security Responses
- The Journey of Interest: Philosophical and Ethical Development from Ancient Rejection to the Modern Financial Crisis
- On the Need to Rethink the Way We Understand Growth: Media Evidence on Economic Growth as an Empty Signifier
- Understanding Predictors of Trust in Science Among University Students: Examining Scientific Reasoning, Cognitive Reflection, Education, and Personal Experiences with the Scientific Community
- The Moderating Role of Gender in Perceived Discrimination Levels and Political Participation of Turkish Women