Using Hookeâ??s law of elasticity to explicate trends and dimensions of crisis in the Niger Delta

Abstract


Nkpah, Young Aakpege

The study draws from a corollary in the physical sciences, showing how a quantitative form could change to a qualitative form (that is water under 100°C). Likewise, the constant bombardment of the Niger Delta social formation could alter its relations of production. To this end, the study goes beyond, (i) the era of early oil exploration/expansion years and community passivity (1903-1970), (ii) Era of oilindustry “consolidation”, incipient agitations and of oil companies, (iii) Era of state command intervention and community reactive militancy to (iv) „fractureâ??. However, elastic materials, either stretched, compressed, or bent comes back to its original shape and size when the force is removed. We posit that the “proportionality limit” is exceeded in the Niger Delta and the region can never be the same using this theoretical exposition. This supports our thesis that “mindful humans under certain conditions would tend to behave like mindless atoms”. The study recommends a Cognitive Personal Development Scheme (CPDS) for development of innate skills and adaptive mechanism for youths of the area as panacea to youth restiveness

Share this article

Awards Nomination

Select your language of interest to view the total content in your interested language

Indexed In
  • Index Copernicus
  • Google Scholar
  • Open J Gate
  • Genamics JournalSeek
  • CiteFactor
  • OCLC- WorldCat
  • Eurasian Scientific Journal Index
  • Rootindexing
  • Academic Resource Index
  • African e-journals Project
  • Africa Bibliographic Database
  • Center for Research Libraries
  • University of Leiden Catalogue
  • African Journals OnLine (AJOL)
  • African Studies Centre
  • University of Saskatchewan Library
  • University of Toronto Libraries
  • Mirabel Network
  • Michigan State University Library
  • Jstor Library