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<title>THE SOCIAL RELATIONS OF COCOA PRODUCTION IN  SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1662" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1662</id>
<updated>2026-04-04T19:13:57Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T19:13:57Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>THE SOCIAL RELATIONS OF COCOA PRODUCTION IN  SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1663" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>ADEJARE, Gbenga Sunday</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1663</id>
<updated>2022-03-04T11:12:30Z</updated>
<published>2021-02-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">THE SOCIAL RELATIONS OF COCOA PRODUCTION IN  SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA
ADEJARE, Gbenga Sunday
Social relations, which are patterned interactions among key actors in context, affect outcomes &#13;
of actions. In Nigeria, social relations between producers and buyers of cocoa are major issues &#13;
affecting cocoa production. Previous studies have focused on agro-ecology of cocoa production &#13;
with little attention to social relations of its production. This study was therefore designed to&#13;
investigate the historical changes, farmers’ network, cultural practices and constructed &#13;
meanings underlying cocoa production in Southwestern Nigeria – a strategic hub of cocoa in &#13;
Nigeria.&#13;
Social Action Theory, exploratory and descriptive designs were adopted for the study. Ondo,&#13;
Osun and Oyo States were purposively selected as study locations because of their prominence &#13;
in cocoa production in Nigeria. Primary and secondary data were utilised. Primary data included&#13;
45 In-depth Interviews with 15 farmers from each state, six Focus Group Discussions (two per &#13;
state) with resident farmers, 12 Key Informant Interviews (four per state) with cocoa buyers, &#13;
association executives and staff of government-owned agricultural agencies, and four Life &#13;
Histories (two in Ondo, one each in Osun and Oyo) were conducted with elderly farmers. Non participant observation was done. Secondary data included official memoranda, reports and &#13;
minutes of meetings of the colonial Cocoa Consumers’ Consultative Committee obtained from &#13;
the National Archives, Ibadan. Data were thematically content-analysed. &#13;
The introduction of cocoa to southwestern Nigeria in 1874 shifted the attention of farmers from &#13;
food crop to cash crop farming, leading to exploitative interrelationships between farmers and &#13;
the cocoa buyers who determined the price. Colonialism expanded the frontiers of cocoa &#13;
production with commercial exportation starting in 1910. While farmers embraced cocoa &#13;
farming, exploitation persisted through land fragmentation, commoditisation of labour, &#13;
individualisation of farm inputs and mistreatment of smallholders. The post-colonial epoch &#13;
retained these trajectories. The survival of farmers was dependent upon and negotiated within &#13;
the networks of kinship, occupational associations, buyers (merchants, licensed agents and &#13;
exporters), and government institutions. Cocoa farmers developed a culture of work that &#13;
combined resilience (ìforítì), communality (àáró), attachment to crop, sharecropping, and &#13;
marriage of customary calendaring with cultural events like masquerade festival. These &#13;
practices informed strategic construction of meanings which belied cocoa production. Farmers &#13;
constructed cocoa as ‘money’ (kòkó d'owó), source of livelihood and economic item for rural &#13;
farmers’ exploitation. Farmers also drew a parallel between cocoa and àbíkú (a child that is &#13;
liable to premature death) with the saying that ẹni tí ó bá lè wo kòkó yè ni ó lè wo ọmọ yè&#13;
(anyone who can successfully raise a cocoa tree can raise a child). Nevertheless, the increasing &#13;
cost of production, rural poverty, youth apathy and feelings of neglect, and exploitation of cocoa &#13;
farmers engendered non-regeneration of farms, poor fermentation and discouragement of new &#13;
entrants that have led to scarcity of labour and shrinking cocoa spaces.&#13;
Social relations are tied to the existential realities of cocoa farmers in Southwestern Nigeria, &#13;
and they implicate the transformation of cocoa production in the area. There is need for value addition, inclusive policies, rural development and improved regulation of cocoa market to &#13;
sustain the cocoa sector.
</summary>
<dc:date>2021-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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