Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:43:45.180Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Political Clientelism and Rural Development in South-Western Nigeria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2011

Abstract

In spite of the universality of clientelism, it is often seen as a peculiar aspect of Third World politics, one which inevitably stifles development. This study examines clientelistic relationships in south-western Nigeria and their possible impact on rural development, with a special focus on Ibadan. It finds that rural clients attract the attention of the political class to promote the exchange of goods for loyalty through associations that afford clients a sort of cohesive power and a common front, the basis of their relevance in the political-clientelistic chain. This clientelistic chain also serves as the channel through which development projects are conceived and implemented. But since the projects provided only serve symbolic purposes, they easily collapse: clients may have the opportunity of changing patrons, but they remain subservient to the political/economic elite. Thus rural underdevelopment persists in spite of a continual inflow of development projects (and goods).

En dépit de son universalité, le clientélisme est souvent considéré comme un aspect propre à la politique du tiers-monde et qui fait inévitablement barrage au développement. Cette étude examine les relations de clientélisme dans le sud-ouest du Nigeria et leur impact possible sur le développement rural, en s'intéressant particuliérement à Ibadan. Elle constate que les clients ruraux attirent l'attention de la classe politique pour promouvoir l'échange de biens contre de la loyauté à travers des associations qui procurent aux clients une sorte de pouvoir cohésif et un front commun, la base de leur pertinence dans la chaîne politico-clientéliste. La chaîne clientéliste sert également de voie de conception et de mise en oeuvre de projets de développement. Or, ces projets ne servant qu'à des fins symboliques, ils échouent facilement : les clients peuvent avoir l'opportunité de changer de patrons, mais ils restent inféodés à l'élite politico-économique. Ce sous-développement rural persiste en dépit d'un afflux continu de projets de développement (et de biens).

Type
Research Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Agbaje, A. (2002) ‘Personal rule and regional politics: Ibadan under military regimes, 1986–1996’ in Guyer, J., Denzer, L. and Agbaje, A. (eds), Money Struggles and City Life: devaluation in Ibadan and other urban centres in southern Nigeria, 1886–1996. Portsmouth NH: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Anderson, L. (2004) ‘Antiquated before they can ossify: states that fail before they reform’, Journal of International Affairs 58 (1): 116.Google Scholar
Auyero, J. (1999) ‘From the clients point(s) of view how do poor people perceive and evaluate political clientelism?’, Theory and Society 28 (2): 297334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Auyero, J. (2000) ‘The logic of clientelism in Argentina: an ethnographic account’, Latin American Research Review 35 (3): 5581.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, S. T. (1986) Patrons and Power: creating a political community in metropolitan Lagos. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Callahan, W. A. (2005) ‘The discourse of vote buying and political reform in Thailand’, Pacific Affairs 78 (1): 95114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chabal, P. and Daloz, J. (1999) Africa Works: disorder as political instrument. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Escobar, C. (2002) ‘Clientelism and citizenship: the limits of democratic reform in Sucre, Colombia’, Latin American Perspectives 29 (5): 2047.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fonchingong, C. C. (2004) ‘The travails of democratization in Cameroon in the context of political liberalization since the 1990s’, African and Asian Studies 3 (1): 3359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garcia-Guadilla, M. P. and Perez, C. (2002) ‘Democracy, decentralization and clientelism’, Latin American Perspectives 29 (5): 90109.Google Scholar
Gloster-Coates, P. and Quest, L. (2005) ‘Kleptocracy: curse of development’, International Social Science Review 80 (1–2): 319.Google Scholar
Golden, M. A. (2003) ‘Electoral connections: the effects of the personal vote on political patronage, bureaucracy and legislation in postwar Italy’, British Journal of Political Science 33 (2): 189212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gore, C. and Pratten, D. (2003) ‘The politics of plunder: the rhetorics of order and disorder in southern Nigeria’, African Affairs 102 (407): 211–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joseph, R. (1991) Democracy and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria: the rise and fall of the Second Republic. Ibadan: Spectrum Books Limited.Google Scholar
Kingston, P. (2001) ‘Patrons, clients and civil society: a case study of environmental politics in postwar Lebanon’, Arab Studies Quarterly 23 (1).Google Scholar
Kitschelt, H. (2000) ‘Linkages between citizens and politicians in democratic polities’, Comparative Political Studies 33 (6): 845–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lande, C. H. (1983) ‘Political clientelism in political studies: retrospect and prospect’, International Political Science Review 4 (4): 435–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marty, M. (2002) ‘Mauritania: political parties, neo-patrimonialism and democracy’, Democratization 9 (3): 92108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olurode, O. (1986) ‘Grassroots politics, political factions and conflict in Nigeria: the case of Iwo, 1976–1986’, Rural Africana 25–26: 113–24.Google Scholar
Ọmọbọwale, A. O. (2006) ‘Political Clientelism and Rural Development in Selected Communities in Ibadan,. Nigeria’. PhD thesis. University of Ibadan.Google Scholar
Ọmọbọwale, A. O. (2008) ‘Clientelism and social structure: an analysis of patronage in Yoruba social thought’, Afrika Spectrum 43 (2): 203–24.Google Scholar
Ọmọbọwale, A. O. and Olutayo, A. O. (2007) ‘Chief Lamidi Adedibu and patronage politics in Nigeria’, Journal of Modern African Studies 45 (3): 425–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, K. W. J. and Jenkins, G. D. (1973) The Price of Liberty: personality and politics in colonial Nigeria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Randall, V. and Svasand, L. (2002) ‘Political parties and democratic consolidation in Africa’, Democratization 9 (3): 3052.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shefner, J. (2001) ‘Coalitions and clientelism in Mexico’, Theory and Society 30 (5): 593628.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, L. (2004) ‘Clientship and citizenship in Latin America’, Bulletin of Latin American Research 23 (2): 213–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Un, K. (2006) ‘State, society and democratic consolidation: the case of Cambodia’, Pacific Affairs 79 (2): 225–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, C. I. (2003) ‘Local factions and the Kuomintang in Taiwan's electoral politics’, International Relations of the Asia-Pacific 3 (1): 89111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar