51. Nigerian Shari’a and Its Effect onNigeria-Niger Trans-Border Political Economy.
- Author
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Kirwin, Matthew
- Subjects
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GLOBALIZATION , *ISLAMIC law , *ECONOMICS , *ISLAM , *LAW ,NIGERIAN economy - Abstract
The era of globalization has created a context where state authority has been undercut and local forces have been empowered. In Africa, the reduction in authoritarian regimes and the emergence of globalization and democratization worked to reveal cleavages along ethnic and religious lines. At the same time, the global economy and structural adjustment reforms have created dramatic economic disparities between and within African nations that are historically linked in ethnic and cultural ways. West Africa experienced some of these tumultuous changes and some of them can be attributed to the instability associated with democratic reform in regions that have had very little experience with the concept. Regional integration in West Africa has been heavily debated topic due to the wide range of institutional, legal and infrastructural barriers that divide the countries that comprise the sub-region. Massive profit making opportunities are salient in instances where economic and political disparities between neighboring countries are present. It is oftentimes profit making opportunities by political elites that fuel opposition to the cause for regional integration. The application of Shari’a (Islamic law) in the Hausa region of Northern Nigeria has dramatically changed the quotidian life in the region. In an attempt to eliminate what is determined to be societal ills, some states have adopted Shari’a and subsequently outlawed activities such as drinking, prostitution and gambling in addition to less controversial habitudes such as praise singing and integration of the sexes in public places. The neighboring country of Niger, which has a large Hausa population as well, has, by contrast, been reticent to base its legal codes on Qur’anic law, which is due in large part to the political legacy of the French colonial government. Niger’s reluctance to mimic Northern Nigeria’s lead has rendered it a safe haven for Nigeria’s outlawed vices and as bars, brothels and informal casinos were shut down in Nigeria, the same establishments were opened in Niger. The activities that have been transferred across the border to Niger have provided a made a substantial economic impact on Niger’s border towns. The movement of illicit activities from Nigeria to Niger serves to demonstrate a case of counter regional integration. Rather than bringing together the two states it forces them further apart. Niger ostensibly uses its status as a secular state as a comparative economic advantage vis a vis a the religious reform carried out in Nigeria. This paper will examine how changes in regional Nigerian politics have had a profound on politics and the economy of Niger. The paper will also look at how the changes in Niger have brought about a strengthening of neo-patrimonialism in instances where rent-seeking possibilities arise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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