Oil-spill disasters and the rural hazardscape of Eastern Nigeria |
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Authors: | Innocent M. Aprioku |
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Affiliation: | National Population Commission, 6th Floor, Point Block, PMB 5121, Port Harcourt, Nigeria |
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Abstract: | The objective of the paper is to investigate the links between the patterns of incidents, the amount of hazardous materials locally present and capability of local emergency preparedness in rural local government councils. Four states Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa and Rivers State were used to examine the nature and pattern of oil-spill disasters in rural Nigeria. It is argued that oil-spill hazards are more than isolated engineering malfunctions. They can be alternatively understood as reflections of the social, economic and political contexts in which they occur. Discriminant analysis is used to examine the relationship between 71 country risk-related and preparedness variables and incident frequency. The findings illustrate the usefulness of contextual analysis in examining the restructuring of rural life and the capacity of fiscally and socially stressed rural communities to respond to environmental change. |
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Keywords: | Hazards Nigeria Oil Risk management Local governance |
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