Abstract

In the developed countries, the military is identified largely for their role in the defence of the country from external aggression and helping out with internal security when the need arises. On the contrary, in a number of developing countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America, when the military is mentioned, their traditional defence and internal security functions get obscured in their political role. For a thirty-year period (1966 – 1999), Nigeria was in this category of countries where the military have combined their constitutional role of defence of the country with that of political governance. While the participation of the military in governance has substantially fizzled out world wide, their impact on the socio-economic and political evolution of the countries concerned have been enormous. This paper critically examines the local government system in Nigeria midwifed by the military in the three decades of their rule; the initial emphasis on efficiency-oriented administration at the local level, the effort which culminated in the 1976 local government reform and the issue of whether the military can serve as modernizers in developing countries. DOI: 10.5901/mjss.2013.v4n13p15

Highlights

  • In many countries, the developed ones, the military is confined to defence from external aggression and sometimes the internal security of the country when the need arises

  • In a number of developing countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America, when the military is mentioned, their defence and internal security functions get obscured in their political role

  • This paper examines the role of the military in shaping the local government system in Nigeria for three decades and impact they have made in the sector

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Summary

Introduction

The developed ones, the military is confined to defence from external aggression and sometimes the internal security of the country when the need arises. In a number of developing countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America, when the military is mentioned, their defence and internal security functions get obscured in their political role. Until just over a decade ago, in parts of Africa, the military, as an institution of the state were active actors in politics and governance it lacks legitimacy as an agent of good and democratic governance. While the institutional footing of the military in Africa is fast disappearing, the impacts of the long autocratic regimes are still very much evident. Nigeria falls into this category of countries where the military have combined their traditional role of defence of the country and that of governance. This paper examines the role of the military in shaping the local government system in Nigeria for three decades and impact they have made in the sector

Military Intervention in Nigeria
Aims of Military Leaders for Local Government in the First Decade
The Great Local Government Reform Decree of 1976
Implementation of the 1976 Reform
The Military Phase from 1983–1999: A Return to the 1976 Reform Position
The Military as Agents of Modernization
Findings
Concluding Comments
Full Text
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