Chapter Two Review of Related Literature
Chapter Two Review of Related Literature
Chapter Two Review of Related Literature
This section reviews the related literature under the following sub-headings:
This study adopts the Social learning theory is a theory of learning process and
social behavior which proposes that new behaviors can be acquired by observing and
imitating others. It states that learning is a cognitive process that takes place in a social
context and can occur purely through observation or direct instruction, even in the
behavior, learning also occurs through the observation of rewards and punishments, a
punished, it will most likely desist. The theory expands on traditional behavioral
order to provide a comprehensive model that could account for the wide range of learning
1
experiences that occur in the real world. As initially outlined by Bandura and Walters in
1963, the theory was entirely behavioral in nature; the crucial element that made it
innovative and increasingly influential was its emphasis upon the role of imitation. Over
the years, however, Bandura shifted to a more cognitive perspective, and this led to a
Adesoji, Abdullahi and Eva (2018) studied on public opinion on the root causes of
terrorism and objectives of terrorists; A Boko Haram Case Study. The study adopted a
survey research design. The population was of the study was 100. The researchers used
questionnaire to collect data for their study. A three-scale Likert was used. The study
concludes that the public strongly believes that revenge against security forces is an
crises in Nigeria”. The study was anchored with fragility theory as a guide, as well as
survey method involving the use of questionnaire and in- depth interview (index matrix
and table technique). The interview focuses on three internally displaced people’s camp
in the state for analysis. The finding of the study reveals that, there is a significant
relationship between Boko Haram insurgency and humanitarian crises when variables
such as: impact on human casualties (IHC), food insecurity (FI) and internally displace
persons (IDP’s) are held constant; while no significant relationships exist. The variables
such as: loss of livelihood (LOL) and government responses (GR) are held constant. By
way of recommendations, the study advocates the need for the Nigerian government to
2
focus more on reducing human casualties, loss of livelihood, food insecurity as well as
Shuaibu, Saleh, & Shehu, (2015) conducted a study titled “effects of Boko Haram
insurgency on Nigerian national security”. The study isolates security agents such as:
police force, department of state service Nigerian security, civil defense corps and the
Nigerian army personnel as the target population. The study adopted poverty theory as a
guide to explain the major causes of Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria. Data were
generated by the use of survey method through the instrument of questionnaire. The
findings of the study reveals that, the Boko Haram insurgent has really made effective
security a difficult task to provide as this is not unconnected with a high level of
corruption within the top ranking officers to the organisation, poor and outdated weapons,
violent conflicts with ethnic religious and/or political undertones. Thousands are annually
internally displaced as a result of natural disasters including flooding in the North and
West, erosion in the East, oil spillage and development projects in the Niger Delta
(South-South). Some incidences also occur because of clashes between Fulani herdsmen
and farmers and between government forces and armed groups. This is in addition to the
over 400,000 Bakassi returnees that were internally displaced from the oil rich Bakassi
Peninsula that was handed over by Nigeria to Cameroon in 2008 resulting from the 10th
Analysts have always expressed fears that the level of conflict and with it the
level of internal displacement, may increase each time general elections year draws
3
nearer. These fears were confirmed when the National Emergency Management Agency
(NEMA) reported that about 65,000 persons were displaced internally due to post-
election violence spread across six Northern states including Bauchi, Kaduna, Kano,
Recent studies (Ladan, 2009-10) have also shown that people’s vulnerability to
internal displacement in Nigeria is not only due to natural and human-made disasters,
unemployment rate among able-bodied and frustrated youths as well as development and
framework to address the plight of such displaced populations and to provide durable
demonstration of political will to providing durable solutions to the plight of IDPs and a
practical admission of the fact that ensuring IDPs protection and assistance primarily lies
with national authorities whose mandate and obligation it is to protect and care for
them.12 One of the key factors compounding the plight of IDPs in Nigeria lies in the
weak or non-existent process of enabling IDPs make an informed and voluntary decision
as to whether to return to their home communities, remain where they are, or settle
4
The Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) are a category of persons displaced
consequences as their means of livelihood such as agriculture and trade are wiped out as
a result of violent conflicts or disaster (Ladan, 2011). Such IDPs often experience
worsening situation of food insecurity and malnutrition, having been displaced from their
means of livelihood. The United Nations Guiding Principles (1998) defined Internally
Displaced Persons as; “persons or groups of persons who have been forced or obliged to
violations of human rights or natural or human-made disasters, and who have not crossed
an internationally recognized state border”. These situations among others create the need
for a humanitarian response. The African Union Convention for Protection and
defined Internally Displaced Persons, in line with that of the United Nations Guiding
Principles. Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) are therefore, citizens of a country who
are displaced within the territory of a country as a result of natural disasters such as
made disasters such as civil war, internal armed conflict, terrorism and so forth like the
cases in Nigeria. In these situations, people are left with the option of fleeing their homes
and natural habitats for safety. Durosaro and Ajiboye (2011) identified two major
movement and the fact that such movement takes place within national borders. As
earlier pointed out in this article, the most identified common causes of involuntary
5
movements are; armed conflicts, violence, human rights violation and disasters
(Norwegian Refugee Council, 2009). The second component of the IDPs is the
movement within national borders. Since IDPs remain legally under the protection of
national authorities of their habitual residence, unlike refugees who have been deprived
of the protection of their state (country) of origin, they are expected to enjoy the same
rights as the rest (undisplaced) of the population (Durosaro & Ajiboye, 2011). In
and social dislocation. In this regard, they need the assistance of the government and
other humanitarian groups that could intervene to cushion the effect of hardship in order
to bring succor to the IDPs. NEMA was established as a federal government agency to
deal among other things, with the issue of internal displacement of citizens of the
country.
level in terms of figures and groups hurt. However, following the thick of insurgency that
began over a decade ago, displacement have happened on a humongous scale and have
taken a devastating toll on vulnerable groups. In other words, the wave of insurgency in
the country have continued to account for the upsurge in the numbers of IDPs in Nigeria,
million people have been displaced in Nigeria (IDMC, 2016), thereby, ranking the
6
country has having the highest population of IDPs in Africa (Premium Times, 2014).
persons, in terms of providing temporary shelters and facilitating aids delivery, more
calls, however, have been made by the Nigerian political leadership urging for additional
support from the organized private sector (including non-government organizations, for-
reference to the deployment of helping professionals to camps where this people are
sheltered.
within and outside the shores of the country, have been active on ground level in
2.3 Needs and Social Services for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)
very limited. Consequently, the two studies that have investigated this subject matter in
The first study was conducted in southern Nigeria involving 25 organizations (20
albeit it was not specified whether these organizations utilized the services of social
workers. Using a mixed methods approach, the researcher found that services rendered to
7
IDPs were inadequate, in that intervention efforts overly concentrated on addressing the
immediate needs of displaced persons with no focus on addressing the long-term needs or
societal issues expressed by IDPs. Although Enwereji (2009) did not indicate whether or
not needs assessments were carried out before interventions were made, it was found that
in-kind items such as food and clothing which were provided on ad-hoc basis dominated
the services rendered to IDPs. Moreover, the researcher, while noting the significance of
psychosocial services in offsetting the trauma experience of displaced persons, found that
the delivery of such service was fragmented, in which case, 3 (12%) of the organizations
The second study was conducted by the International Committee of the Red Cross
organizations (ICRC, 2016). Findings revealed that IDPs received fairly adequate
humanitarian assistance such as food and clothing but that in relation to rendering
Semigina (2015) conducted a study involving 10 social workers who were drawn
Ukraine. Using a mixed method approach based on a rapid assessment technique, the
author found that social work services were lopsided and insufficient as intervention
efforts were mainly oriented to therapeutic treatment and/or crisis intervention. She
concluded that social work services ‘lack[ed] systematic approaches… [since] they are
not empowering strategies but passive tactics of meeting basic needs’ (p.10).
8
1. Negative coping mechanisms: IDPs’ financial struggles, including the high costs
of living in urban areas, and their increased vulnerability affect the safety of
putting them at risk of violence, exploitation and abuse. Urban centres are home
to both formal and inform labour markets. But in many developing economies, the
informal market represents the larger share of the economy. Many internally
displaced children work within this sector, which is typically unregulated and
and risks associated with unregulated jobs, pose severe protection concerns and
potentially put children in conflict with the law. Displaced children are often only
able to work at unskilled jobs that negatively impact their lives, including their
Afghanistan, 21 per cent of surveyed families had at least one working child
under 14 years of age. In Kabul, 26 per cent of families sent at least one child to
work, compared to 15 per cent among rural IDP families. (DMC, 2017). In
forced to sell things on the street, to wash cars or beg, putting them at risk of
being hit by a motor vehicle, being kidnapped or suffering some other kind of
violence.17 In the cities of Dhaka, Goma and Bukavu, the need for survival has
9
Child Marriage:
Child marriage as a negative coping strategy for internally displaced families has
marry at a later age than in the past. But this is not the case for displaced women. A
survey of young women living in informal settlements in Jalalabad, Kabul and Kandahar
showed that these women were having children as early as 16 and may have married
when they were even younger (NRC, 2012) A research study on the protection of IDPs
in Afghanistan found that in a third of IDP families, at least one child was forced to
marry. Overall, 27 per cent of internally displaced girls were forced to marry against their
will. Food insecurity and poverty are often important motivators, cited by 52.1 per cent
of surveyed IDP households as reasons for child marriage. Young IDPs desire to be
independent and establish their own households rather than live in crowded makeshift
caught in the crossfire. They also are at risk of being recruited by armed forces, armed
forces or other armed groups. IDPs tend to live in poor and unsafe districts where they
are exposed to criminal activities and gangs (ICRC, 2018). Unaccompanied displaced
children, such as those separated from their families, are especially vulnerable. They may
face ‘round-ups’, forced conscription and sexual assault. Angela. 2017; Anne-Lynn,
2916). In Colombia, because adolescents there can evade heavy criminal sentences, they
are sought out by armed groups. This is more likely to happen in peripheral or
marginalized neighbourhoods and villages where social support and access to education
10
is limited and where household conditions do not provide the necessary support. In
Bogotá, the main employment opportunities for displaced children and adolescents are in
the military or with paramilitary and guerrilla forces. In urban slums with limited rule of
law, young IDPs also face a high probability of arbitrary arrest or detention.
registration of displaced people is often the only requirement for accessing aid and
services. But in cities, access to services generally requires personal identification papers.
Without these, children and their families may be unable to enrol in school, or to receive
healthcare, humanitarian aid and secure housing. This makes the loss of personal
identification documents, and challenges replacing them, a recurring issue for all IDPs,
In Afghanistan, national identity cards are issued only in the area of origin.
Children, including the displaced, cannot attend school without them, despite their
cannot access health services.29 Without immunization cards or medical records, they
Iraq, ration cards are issued only to male heads of households, preventing unaccompanied
ration cards may be distributed only to IDPs living in camps, not to displaced children in
non-camp, urban settings (Hilde, Dolan and Dennis, 2017) Missing documentation can
11
also make it impossible for families to secure formal tenancy contracts, forcing them to
In Nigeria, while primary and secondary health care services are often more accessible to
internally displaced children in urban areas, compared with their rural counterparts,
Education:
Schools serve as an essential safe haven for internally displaced children. They
can be essential to helping children regain a sense of normalcy and receive the support
they need to integrate into their host communities. But internally displaced children in
urban areas often face significant challenges to their right to education. These include
their families’ financial struggles, the children’s lack of documentation or legal status,
discrimination, and language barriers. Displaced children may not be able to study
because they have been forced to work or marry or because schools are being used as
quality education. IDP camps, by contrast, tend to have better educational resources
because they are the focus of humanitarian interventions and donor attention (UNICEF,
In Libya, 20 per cent of all IDPs live in former schools or empty warehouses,
lacking access to sanitation. Beyond the health concerns, this means that children from
the host community and those that are internally displaced cannot use these facilities as
they were intended. When schools serve as shelters, children’s access to education, as
well as their social life and psychological stability, are affected. In Iraq, the start of the
12
school year was delayed by six months in 2014 because schools were being utilized as
There are several housing situations common to internally displaced children and
their families in urban areas. These include sharing a house with relatives or a host
displaced children also may end up on the street when housing is unavailable. For
adolescent boys, the search for housing can be particularly difficult. For example, in El
Salvador, governments do not accommodate IDPs. This forces mothers to seek refuge in
parents, causing families to be separated. Each of these situations can affect children’s
physical and mental health. Family unity protects children’s lives, their development and
their well-being. Internally displaced families that stay together are more likely to thrive
and integration.
care and other services. If settlements are far away from schools, or if transport is either
non-existent or too expensive, children cannot access the services they need.
Additionally, the informal settlements where IDPs often live tend to be located in
precarious areas. These may include river banks, exposed to flooding and landslides, and
out of reach of municipal services such as waste management and sanitation. For those
13
without housing, the consequences are significant. Homelessness can compromise the
growth, development and security of internally displaced children. Forced evictions can
also affect internally displaced families, jeopardizing family stability and threatening
Access to basic services in the home, such as safe drinking water and adequate
within or close to the home can mean long journeys to collect water at remote water
points, particularly for girls who are often assigned this chore. Such journeys can
negatively impact children’s education and subject them to harassment and other threats
overcrowded, illegal settlements with lower humanitarian indicators than those in camps.
diseases that are particularly dangerous for children. Diseases such as measles, mumps,
rubella, polio and yellow fever thrive in densely populated urban areas. Towns and cities
in regions where flows of forcibly displaced people are common need to be prepared to
absorb large population movements. This means factoring displacement into urban plans,
which need to be flexible enough to adapt to changing situations, so that they can better
manage growth. Where urban areas are at risk of disasters, relocation sites should be
planning also requires building the capacity of urban authorities and equipping them with
the tools to manage displacement well, during both normal times and crises (Lam,
14
2.4 Financial Strength of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)
In 2015, the majority of the IDPs population arising from the Boko Haram
insurgency constituted 79 per cent of the IDPs population in Nigeria. These Internally
Displaced Persons (IDPs) including widowed women and children orphaned by the
Organizations (NGOs) and agencies of the United Nations, in collaboration with local
Despite the efforts of both the local and international humanitarian agencies,
many of the internally displaced people are still exposed to debilitating hunger and
generating activities undertaken by IDPs, their vocational skills and training needs.
Particularly, the survey entailed mapping out the market systems in project areas to;
identify the current opportunities for skills and products; identify barriers to exploiting
current opportunities and suggest ways in which IDPs can navigate them.
The plights of displaced persons across the world have become a formidable
including hunger, insecurity, and death, among other growing humanitarian crises
15
Since 2009, North-eastern Nigeria, which consists of six states that include Borno,
Adamawa, Yobe, Bauchi, Gombe, and Taraba has largely been challenged by the internal
displacement crisis. Mba (2017) finds that 13.33% of the IDPs in the area were displaced
by communal clashes, 0.99% by natural disasters and 85.68% of the displacement was
caused by the Boko Haram insurgency. The above statistics confirm that insurgency has
largely been responsible for the mass internal displacement of persons, especially in
Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states, which have remained the epicenter of insurgent
activities in North-eastern Nigeria since 2009. The crisis, which is linked to poor
destruction of lives and property. It is on record that the Boko Haram insurgency had
killed over 30,000 people between 2009 and 2018, driven over 1.8 million out of their
homes, and destroyed property worth #16 billion (International Review of the Red Cross,
2018). Apart from the mass internal displacement of persons, the insurgency has also
generated 177,000 refugees in neighboring countries of Cameroon, Chad, and the Niger
Thus, the North-eastern States have witnessed the unprecedented negative impact
of the Boko Haram insurgency from 2009 to date; which eventually culminated in the
declaration of a State of Emergency (SOE) in the three most affected states of Borno,
Yobe, and the Adamawa States in 2013 by Former President Goodluck Jonathan. Most of
the 9.6 million people (National Bureau of Statistics, 2018) living in the then SOE states
have been affected in one way or the other by the insurgency attacks, which have led to
16
communities, destruction of social infrastructure and intense destruction of supply chain
process of the economy and dispersal of a larger chunk of citizens in the affected states.
Much of the physical destructions by the insurgents were recorded in Borno State
as many Local Government Areas, including but not limited to Dikwa, Marte, Bama,
Gamboru, Ngala, Gwoza were overrun. Other Local Government Areas that were
attacked by the insurgents include Chibok, Askira Uba, Kala Balge, Kukawa, and Abadan
(Reliefweb, 2020). The loss of lives, destruction of property, and the disruption of
economic activities forced residents of these areas to flee to Maiduguri metropolis where
they were crammed together in camps as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) while
others squat amongst many poor host families in the city under precarious conditions
devoid of privacy, basic hygiene and conveniences. In Yobe State, Gujba and Gulani
Local Government Areas were at a point effectively taken over and cut off from
Damaturu; the State capital with the destruction of the Katarko Bridge by the insurgents.
Schools, public buildings, places of worship, markets, and residential buildings were also
destroyed by the insurgents in the two Local Government Areas. During the peak of the
crisis, the southwards expansion of the Boko Haram activities culminated in the invasion
of Madagali and Michika Local Government Areas of Adamawa State. Mubi, the capital
of the Mubi Local Government Area and the second-largest commercial town in the State
was temporarily overrun and occupied by the insurgents. The palpable fear led to a mass
exodus of IDPs into Yola; the Adamawa State capital where they took refuge in seven
camps while others reside within the host communities. The insurgent threat also led to
the forced closure of the Adamawa State University, Mubi (Samuel, 2020).
17
The Assessment Capacity Project (ACP) (2018) identifies eight potential risks
that every displaced person faces. These include landlessness, which removes the main
foundation upon which the displaced productive capacity, commercial activities, and
livelihoods are dependant, especially in the rural area where the livelihood of many
residents is based on the agricultural produce; thus reducing their chance of tension-free
life. Joblessness is another fundamental feature of displacement as job loss is very high
among the displaced population. Job loss among the IDPs is essentially noticeable in both
the rural and urban sectors, especially among those who are self-employed as agricultural
displacement, such loss of a family's home along with their cultural heritage often results
in alienation and social status deprivation. Forced displacement leads to loss of access to
common property resources, including pastures, forested lands, water bodies, quarries,
and agricultural land, community schools, which serve common and collective purposes
for the displaced in their natural habitats. As posited by the Assessment Projects Capacity
(2018), forced displacement is bound to cause food insecurity among the victims in form
of reduced food availability, accessibility, affordability, and utility, which the ousters
often face, leading to the food crisis, malnutrition, and undernourishment among the
displaced persons.
internally displaced persons by the global community through the development of thirty
Guiding Principles for Internal Displacement of Persons (GPID), which were designed
and adopted by the United Nations to meet the challenges of severe deprivation, hardship,
and discrimination encountered by the IDPs. The policies recognize the right of IDPs to
18
be protected, defended, fed, and empowered while under the custody of the national
authorities, and the non-state actors also have the moral responsibilities to care for the
IDPs.
Related to the UN international Guiding Principles for the IDPs from the regional
perspective is the African Union Convention on the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs),
known as the Kampala Convention (KC), which legally emphasizes the right of dignified
existence of all IDPs within the country and the non-denial of their fundamental rights to
fifty-four member states of the African Union, only seven have laws and policies relating
to IDPs. These include Angola, Burundi, Kenya, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Sudan, and
International Displacement Monitoring Centre (2019), precisely, Nigeria does not have
specific laws to cater to the wellbeing of the IDPs. Though a legal framework was
proposed in 2006, the drafted bill was not passed into law. Nevertheless the GPID is non-
practical guide to all stakeholders and responders to the plights of the IDPs globally.
In their work, Adesote et al. (2015) traced the genesis of internal displacement in
Nigeria to the Biafran war (1967–1970), in which about 500,000 people died with about
magnitude has not been repeated in the country, there had been internal displacement in
Nigeria in 2002 when approximately 30,000 people were forced to flee their homes after
ethno-religious violence rocked the Northern states of Kaduna, Kano, Bauchi, Taraba,
Nassarawa, Benue, and Plateau states, among others. According to the Global Report on
19
Internal Displacement (2019), the exact human displacement figure in Nigeria is difficult
to estimate because many internally displaced persons seek shelter within social networks
and relocate to other towns and communities to join their families and clan members.
The performance of NEMA in managing the IDP crisis in Nigeria over the years
has also come under intense scrutiny by stakeholders. A critical segment of the society;
the Human Rights Watch (2018) contends NEMA has not performed optimally in the
discharge of its statutory functions towards the displaced while NEMA claim to be doing
its best relative to available resources (National Emergency Management Agency, 2018).
NEMA's efforts towards addressing the plights of the IDPs in the views of Ajijola (2017)
are grossly hampered by underfunding and lack of technical competence, while also
noting that lack of awareness of available post-camp opportunities are part of the causal
factors of victim's vulnerability to intense sufferings. The author suggests that NEMA
identify all potential early warning internal displacement signals and address them before
What has been distilled from this review is that internally displaced persons are
facing series of challenges from different crises; arising from the natural and human-
induced crisis. The critical gap left for this study to fill borders on the fact that none of
the existing literature has adequately studied the institutional capacity of NEMA to
respond to the plights of the IDPs although the agency is the primary national responder
to them, a gap this study intends to bridge by examining the response capacity of the
20
2.5 Summary and Uniqueness of the Study
Recent studies (Ladan, 2009-10) have also shown that people’s vulnerability to
internal displacement in Nigeria is not only due to natural and human-made disasters,
unemployment rate among able-bodied and frustrated youths as well as development and
framework to address the plight of such displaced populations and to provide durable
Thus, the North-eastern States have witnessed the unprecedented negative impact of
the Boko Haram insurgency from 2009 to date; which eventually culminated in the
declaration of a State of Emergency (SOE) in the three most affected states of Borno,
Yobe, and the Adamawa States in 2013 by Former President Goodluck Jonathan. Most of
the 9.6 million people (National Bureau of Statistics, 2018) living in the then SOE states
have been affected in one way or the other by the insurgency attacks, which have led to
process of the economy and dispersal of a larger chunk of citizens in the affected states.
21
CHAPTER THREE
METHODOLOGY
This section focused on the methodology of the study, how data will be collected,
organized and analyzed. The following are the components that will be discussed under this
section:
This study used survey design. Survey design in educational studies has been strongly
(1991) is a procedure for the collection of information or data associated with education
education and is a valuable means of gathering data, he further stressed that a survey
method involves large and small population where samples are selected and studied in
22
3.2 Population and Sample
The population for this study consists of all the IDPs in the selected IDPs camp.
Stratified sampling techniques will be adopted. Anderson (1980) maintained that 25% of
a population is enough sample for a research sample for a research purpose. The sample
will include two hundred (200) males and female IDPs in the selected camps.
The instrument used for data collection is self-design questionnaire containing items each
carefully structured on each of the objectives covered or investigated in this study. The
questionnaire will be fashioned along four point modified Likert scale, developed by the
researcher. The questionnaire scores was scaled with Strongly Agreed (SA), Agreed (A),
Strongly Disagreed (SD), Disagree (D) was attributed to each item on the questionnaire.
The researcher personally administered the questionnaire with the help of research
assistance and of two other trained assistants that will help in the administration of the
The administration of the instrument will be done in the following order: the researcher
will collect an introductory letter from the Faculty of Education, University of Maiduguri
to help in the establishment of rapport with the various authorities of the sample schools
and others that they say may involve. The researcher will sought permission from
administrators of the sample schools before embarking on the data collection process.
Appointment will be book and the researcher will visit the administrators of the sample
schools to administer the questionnaire. The researcher will visit some IDPs camps in
Maiduguri, these are Bakassi, Dalori and Teachers’ Village. All the items on the
23
questionnaire in each of the variables will be personally checked to ascertain their
Data was analysed after thorough checking and coding of the data collected. The
(IDPs) in Maiduguri, Borno State will be presented on a table. The information on each
of the objectives available will be coded on the bases of the response. All data collected
The expected outcome from this study will be the views of the respondents on the needs
State.
24