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Prolonged Insecurity in Nigeria: Diplomatic, Economic and Political Trajectories from a Diaspora Perspective -By Dr. Hansen Ivara

Prolonged insecurity in Nigeria is not merely a domestic concern; it is a regional and international policy challenge with global implications. From a diaspora perspective, the persistence of violence reflects accumulated diplomatic, economic, and political trajectories rather than the absence of effort or capacity.

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Nigeria’s prolonged insecurity has increasingly become a subject of international concern, not only because of its scale and persistence but also due to its implications for regional stability, global development, and transnational security. From a diaspora perspective, Nigeria’s security challenges are best understood not as isolated failures of enforcement but as the outcome of intersecting diplomatic, economic, and political trajectories that have evolved over decades.

While the Nigerian state has invested heavily in military responses to terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, communal violence, and separatist agitations, the durability of these threats suggests that insecurity has become structurally embedded. For international observers and partners, this raises critical questions about governance, state capacity, and the effectiveness of prevailing policy frameworks.

Diplomatic Trajectories: Regional Interdependence and Strategic Drift

Nigeria’s security environment is inseparable from broader regional dynamics in West and Central Africa. The expansion of violent extremist networks across the Sahel, the proliferation of small arms, and porous borders have created a security ecosystem that transcends national boundaries. Despite Nigeria’s historical leadership role in African diplomacy and peacekeeping, its contemporary diplomatic posture appears increasingly reactive. In line with this, can one raise the question, of why Nigeria had to wait for President Trump to publicly declare Nigeria as a country of particular concern before waking up in a panic mode to frontally face the rising wave of banditry? 

From the diaspora vantage point, this reflects a gradual strategic drift rather than diplomatic incapacity. Nigeria remains a pivotal regional actor, yet coordination with neighbouring states on intelligence-sharing, border management, and joint operations has often been inconsistent. The erosion of multilateral cohesion within regional institutions has further complicated collective responses to shared threats.

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For international partners, this highlights the importance of reinforcing Nigeria-led regional security mechanisms rather than fragmenting assistance into bilateral, short-term interventions. Sustainable security outcomes are more likely when diplomatic engagement prioritises prevention, coordination, and institutional strengthening over episodic crisis management.

Economic Trajectories: Insecurity as Both Cause and Consequence

Economically, Nigeria’s insecurity both reflects and reinforces structural vulnerabilities. High youth unemployment, regional inequality, limited access to education, and weak social safety nets have created environments in which violence becomes a rational, if tragic, survival strategy for some groups. Insecurity, in turn, undermines productivity, disrupts supply chains, and erodes investor confidence.

The economic costs are not confined to affected regions. Agricultural disruption, internal displacement, and rising food insecurity exert inflationary pressures with national and cross-border consequences. Nigeria’s continued dependence on oil revenues, combined with slow economic diversification, further constrains the state’s capacity to absorb shocks and finance long-term stabilization efforts.

From the diaspora perspective, these dynamics also weaken one of Nigeria’s most valuable external assets: its global human and financial capital. While remittances remain substantial, insecurity discourages diaspora investment, skills transfer, and long-term engagement. For international development actors, this underscores the necessity of linking security interventions to inclusive economic policies that address root causes rather than symptoms.

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Political Trajectories: Governance, Legitimacy, and the Social Contract

At the political level, insecurity thrives where legitimacy is contested and institutions are perceived as ineffective or uneven. Nigeria’s security challenges are closely tied to a widening trust deficit between the state and segments of the population. Where communities feel unprotected or excluded, alternative authority structures—sometimes violent—fill the vacuum.

The centralization of security architecture has further complicated responsiveness to diverse local contexts. While national cohesion remains a constitutional priority, the lack of adaptive, community-informed security governance has limited effectiveness on the ground. Political polarization and identity-based narratives have also heightened tensions, reducing the space for consensus-driven reform.

From an international policy standpoint, Nigeria’s experience reinforces a broader lesson: security sector effectiveness is inseparable from governance quality. Without accountability, transparency, and inclusive political processes, even well-resourced security institutions struggle to achieve durable outcomes.

Policy Implications for Nigeria and International Partners

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A diaspora-informed analysis does not frame Nigeria’s insecurity as inevitable, but as a challenge requiring recalibrated policy choices. Several implications emerge for decision-makers:

  1. Integrated Security Governance
    Nigeria’s security strategy would benefit from closer alignment with economic development, social inclusion, and justice reforms. Military responses should be embedded within a broader governance framework.
  2. Revitalised Regional Diplomacy
    Nigeria’s leadership within regional and continental security architectures remains critical. International partners should prioritise support for multilateral, Nigeria-led initiatives that address cross-border threats collectively.
  3. Institutional and Security Sector Reform
    Professionalisation, accountability, and civilian oversight of security institutions are essential to restoring public trust and operational effectiveness.
  4. Diaspora Engagement as Policy Resource
    Structured engagement with the Nigerian diaspora can enhance policy design, investment flows, and international advocacy, particularly in fragile and post-conflict settings.
  5. Long-Term International Partnerships
    External assistance should move beyond short-term stabilization toward sustained investments in institutions, human capital, and governance capacity.

Conclusion

Prolonged insecurity in Nigeria is not merely a domestic concern; it is a regional and international policy challenge with global implications. From a diaspora perspective, the persistence of violence reflects accumulated diplomatic, economic, and political trajectories rather than the absence of effort or capacity.

For Nigeria and its partners, the path forward lies in strategic coherence: aligning security with diplomacy, economics with inclusion, and authority with legitimacy. Security achieved through force alone remains fragile. Security grounded in governance, cooperation, and shared responsibility offers a more sustainable foundation for stability—within Nigeria and beyond.

Dr. Hansen Ivara

ECU Research Fellow

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28, Cerulean Prom, Clyde North, Melbourne, VIC-AU

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