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ID160219
Title ProperExploring the subsidiarity principle in policing and the operations of the Nigeria Police Force
LanguageENG
AuthorOdeyemi, Temitayo I ;  Obiyan, A Sat
Summary / Abstract (Note)The provisions of the 1999 Constitution, which recognises the existence of a single police force and forbids parallel police organisations, have oftentimes generated controversies among actors in the Nigerian federal polity. Rising insecurity precipitates lingering questions on the utility and adequacy of a single, highly centralised and centrally controlled police force given Nigeria’s geographic vastness and demographic diversity. Conversely, arguments have also dwelt on the dangers of fragmentation considering Nigeria’s psychosocial, economic and political nature. This article attempts to balance these arguments by analysing policing and the operations of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) through the lens of the subsidiarity principle. Subsidiarity is a governance principle in federations, captured in the founding documents of the European Union (EU), which prescribes that governmental powers, authorities and duties should be held by the tier that can best perform them equitably, efficiently, effectively, suitably and based on interest and need. Drawing largely on interviews with purposively selected police scholars, political actors, civil society organisations and police personnel, the paper contends that this principle offers a pragmatic solution to the perennial problems of intergovernmental frictions on the use of the police within the context of governance in the Nigerian federation.
`In' analytical NoteAfrican Security Review Vol. 27, No.1; Mar 2018: p.42-60
Journal SourceAfrican Security Review Vol: 27 No 1
Key WordsFederation ;  Police ;  Policing ;  Subsidiarity ;  Nigeria Police Force


 
 
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