Authors
Okorocha C. Matthew
Department of Political Science
Abia State University, Uturu
Ndukwe, Kalu
Department of Political Science
Abia State University, Uturu
Nwanoro Mercy
Department of Political Science
Abia State University, Uturu
mercy.yong2015@gmail.com +9068162158
Abstract
Conflicts between herders and crop farmers have
emerged as one of the most persistent security and
development challenges in Nigeria. Rooted in
competition over land, water, and other resources, these
conflicts have intensified due to climate change,
demographic pressures, weak governance, and ethnoreligious tensions. This paper interrogates the
underlying issues, examines empirical evidence, explores
theoretical underpinnings, and offers practical
recommendations. Using a mixed-method approach that combines secondary data, content analysis of existing
reports, and survey findings, the study reveals that
herder-farmer conflicts are driven primarily by scarcity
of arable land, desertification, encroachments into
grazing routes, and political manipulation of identity
cleavages. Findings indicate devastating socio-economic
costs, including displacement, loss of lives, disruption of
livelihoods, food insecurity, and the erosion of
intercommunal trust. Several tables and case
illustrations are presented to highlight trends across
regions. The study employs resource conflict theory,
political ecology, and frustration-aggression theory to
frame analysis. Results show that sustainable solutions
must combine security enforced with inclusive land
tenure reforms, climate adaption strategies, and
participatory peace building frameworks. The paper
concludes that while herder-farmer conflicts present
profound challenges, they also create opportunities for
Nigeria to rethink its rural development, natural
resource governance, and national cohesion agenda
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