Dlaczego Arabska Wiosna nie dotarła do Nigerii?
Ładowanie...
Data wydania
2012
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN
1733-2680
eISSN
Tytuł tomu
ISBN
eISBN
Wydawca
Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM
Abstrakt
This paper attempts to understand the question why Nigerians were involved in nationwide
strikes, that took place in major cities across Nigeria in January 2012, it was interpreted as a prelude
to civic revolution, like it was in the countries of the Arab Spring. The immediate cause of the
national uprising that affected all sectors of the labor market; the government’s decision which was
announced on the 1st of January 2012, was taking the subsidy off fuel prices on the Nigerian market.
In Nigeria, one of the largest exporters of crude oil on the African continent, by the end of 2011
the price per liter of fuel was 65 Naira. From January 1 liter of petrol cost 141 Naira. Protesters demanded
the withdrawal of the government decision and also demanded that problems of corruption,
lack of financial transparency in public offices and mismanagement of the economy be tackled in
an open way. After a week of protests the government reduced the price of gasoline to 97 Naira per
liter, resulting in protesting citizens have suspended street protests and unions’ strikes. The authors
adopted a psychosocial perspective text analysis of the January events, focusing on the prevailing
attitudes of Nigerians towards the policy and to pursue a common public interest.
Opis
Słowa kluczowe
Źródło
Krakowskie Studia Międzynarodowe 2012, nr 1, s. 257-265.