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Minority Identities in Nigeria
Contesting and Claiming Citizenship in the Twentieth Century
Reframes Nigeria's nationalist narrative to explore Niger Delta minority communities beyond their experience of crude oil politics.
Oghenetoja Okoh (Author)
9781108488471, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 16 October 2025
250 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm, 0.529 kg
'Oghenetoja Okoh has crafted a significant contribution to the study of Nigerian political history. In accessible prose and well-organized chapters, she explores the historical construction of majority and minority identities in Nigeria and how they became centered around ethnicity. Through an examination of Niger Delta communities, she shows how they competed for resources as ethnic subjects. She also demonstrates how colonial administrative reorganizations up to the decolonization period cemented the role that ethnicity would play in the very definition of Nigerian citizenship. This study is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding the roots of the contemporary Nigerian state and its relationship with communities of the Niger Delta.' Judith A. Byfield, author of A Great Upheaval: Women and Nation in Post-War Nigeria
Ethnic majorities and minorities are produced over time by the same processes that define national borders and create national institutions. Minority Identities in Nigeria traces how western Niger Delta communities became political minorities first, through colonial administrative policies in the 1930s; and second, by embracing their minority status to make claims for resources and representation from the British government in the 1940s and 50s. This minority consciousness has deepened in the post-independence era, especially under the pressures of the crude oil economy. Blending discussion of local and regional politics in the Niger Delta with the wider literature on developmental colonialism, decolonization, and nationalism, Oghenetoja Okoh offers a detailed historical analysis of these communities. This study moves beyond a singular focus on the experience of crude oil extraction, exploring a longer history of state manipulation and exploitation in which minorities are construed as governable citizens.
Introduction: setting the context: the western Niger delta
1. 'Active methods of showing dislike': colonial resistance in Warri province, 1927
2. The consolidation of ethnicity in the Niger delta: colonial reorganization, development, and taxation in Warri, 1928–38
3. Postwar minority politics: reform and the limits of nationalism, 1939-52
4. The mid-west region: minority claims and shifting local alliances, 1950–57
5. Defining minorities on the eve of Nigerian independence: the minorities commission, 1957–58
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: African history [HBJH]
