Abstract

Peace as the absence of both direct and indirect violence in Nigeria has eluded the Nigerian child. From the perspective of direct violence, the Nigerian child has not been spared the horrors of wars that have dotted Nigeria’s geographical space since independence. From the perspective of indirect violence, the Nigerian child has been thrown to the center stage of structural and cultural violence. This has combined to challenge the long walk of the Nigerian child to peace and security within Nigeria. However, in the analysis of war and peace in Nigeria, the plight of the Nigerian child is rarely brought to bear. From the home to the streets, the Nigerian child has experience varying aspects of violence that has challenged his/her overall growth, development and progress. The study examines the impact of indirect and direct violence on the Nigerian child. It submits that in spite of extant legislations meant to protect the Nigerian child, the structure of the Nigerian society arguably makes the Nigerian child vulnerable to hardship, hunger, poverty, exclusion, oppression, marginalization, subordination, intimidation, maltreatment and denial. The study recommends that the Nigerian child should be treated as a security issue demanding immediate attention and responses from the government. Key words: Nigeria, war, peace, direct violence, indirect violence, development, child.

Highlights

  • Violence bestrides the intersection of war and peace

  • War and other variants of armed conflicts make for direct violence; while poverty, child labour, child trafficking, poor healthcare, traditional practices, exclusion, intimidation, denial, among others, make for the varieties of structural and cultural violence which are indirectly expressed and felt (Galtung, 1985)

  • The Millennium Goal (MDGs) of the year 2000 again identified a number of goals for the development of countries some of which involves the development of children, especially millions of them in Nigeria (Kwanashie, 1998)

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Summary

African Journal of History and Culture

Peace as the absence of both direct and indirect violence in Nigeria has eluded the Nigerian child. From the perspective of direct violence, the Nigerian child has not been spared the horrors of wars that have dotted Nigeria’s geographical space since independence. From the perspective of indirect violence, the Nigerian child has been thrown to the center stage of structural and cultural violence. This has combined to challenge the long walk of the Nigerian child to peace and security within Nigeria. The study examines the impact of indirect and direct violence on the Nigerian child.

INTRODUCTION
The child as a social construct and an elastic concept
Poverty and the Nigerian child
Child mortality in Nigeria
Maternal mortality in Nigeria and the effect on the Nigerian child
Traditional practices as they affect the Nigerian child
Child trafficking as indirect violence on the Nigerian child
The external child trafficking trade
Findings
Findings from the study show that the Nigerian child has
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