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<title>EFFECTS OF OIL EXPLOITATION ON FAMILIES IN OGULAGHA KINGDOM, DELTA STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2108</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 23:47:48 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-05T23:47:48Z</dc:date>
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<title>EFFECTS OF OIL EXPLOITATION ON FAMILIES IN OGULAGHA KINGDOM, DELTA STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2109</link>
<description>EFFECTS OF OIL EXPLOITATION ON FAMILIES IN OGULAGHA KINGDOM, DELTA STATE, NIGERIA
RAJI, Ganiyu Alade
Oil exploitation has occasioned environmental degradation, conflicts, restiveness and&#13;
insecurity in the Niger Delta region with resultant effects on family lives in particular&#13;
and human security in general. Extant studies have focused more on environmental&#13;
degradation, communal conflicts over land and violent agitations over allocation of oil&#13;
revenues among members at communal level than on effects of oil exploitation&#13;
particularly at family level in Ogulagha Kingdom. This study, therefore, was designed&#13;
to examine the effects of oil exploitation on families in Ogulagha Kingdom, Delta&#13;
State, Nigeria, with a view to determining how their livelihood, education and health&#13;
were affected.&#13;
The Radcliffe Brown’s Structural Functionalism was used as the framework, while the&#13;
mixed methods design was adopted. Convenience sampling was used to select 230&#13;
respondents to whom a self-designed questionnaire was administered. Purposive&#13;
sampling technique was used to select 20 family heads, 10 community chiefs, 10&#13;
community opinion leaders, 10 representatives of youth groups and eight&#13;
representatives of women association, the Chairman of Burutu Local Government&#13;
Area and the traditional ruler of Ogulagha Kingdom with whom in-depth interviews&#13;
were conducted. Key informant interviews were conducted, four each, with members&#13;
of staff of Shell Petroleum Development Company and Nigerian Agip Oil Company,&#13;
Niger Delta Development Commission and Delta State Oil Producing Areas&#13;
Development Commission. They also included two officials of the Nigerian National&#13;
Petroleum Corporation, two medical doctors, four officials of federal and state&#13;
agencies on environmental impact assessment in Delta State. Eight Focus Group&#13;
Discussions were held, one each, among the largest associations of men, women, boys&#13;
and girls. Relevant reports and publications on the activities of government agencies&#13;
and multinational companies were used to generate secondary data. Quantitative data&#13;
were analysed using descriptive statistics, while qualitative data were contentanalysed.&#13;
Prior to oil exploitation, families in Ogulagha Kingdom flourished economically&#13;
through fishing, farming, salt making, trade by barter, canoe carving and gin&#13;
distillation among others. Oil exploitation activities led to poor livelihood and abject&#13;
poverty. Economically, fishing (63.3%), a major means of livelihood for families&#13;
diminished to 3.4%, and only made possible with modern fishing boats, which an&#13;
average fisherman could not afford. Farming (17.8%), another source of sustenance&#13;
for families dwindled to 2.6% owing to severe gas pollution. Families were further&#13;
affected by health-related challenges, such as body itching, skin rashes, chronic cough,&#13;
catarrh, diarrhea and cancer. Other societal effects included high rate of school&#13;
dropout, prostitution among young ladies and incessant conflicts between the youths&#13;
and oil companies. Palliative measures from government and oil companies in form of&#13;
financial largesse and social amenities were inadequate to address the situation.&#13;
Oil exploitation in the Niger Delta depleted families in Ogulagha Kingdom, Nigeria&#13;
socially, economically and health wise. Government agencies at all strata and&#13;
multinational companies should develop well-targeted interventions at household level&#13;
as well as resuscitate primary health care programme and provide social amenities to&#13;
mitigate the negative effects of oil exploitation.
</description>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jun 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-06-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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