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<title>PRINT MEDIA REPRESENTATION OF THE ROLES OF WOMEN IN IFE-MODAKEKE AND AGULERI-UMULERI COMMUNAL CONFLICTS IN NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2186</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 22:17:42 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-22T22:17:42Z</dc:date>
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<title>PRINT MEDIA REPRESENTATION OF THE ROLES OF WOMEN IN IFE-MODAKEKE AND AGULERI-UMULERI COMMUNAL CONFLICTS IN NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2187</link>
<description>PRINT MEDIA REPRESENTATION OF THE ROLES OF WOMEN IN IFE-MODAKEKE AND AGULERI-UMULERI COMMUNAL CONFLICTS IN NIGERIA
OGBONNA, Ifeyinwa Maureen
Print media representation of the roles of actors in conflict is a global phenomenon. In&#13;
Nigeria, the print media reportage of community conflicts, including Ife-Modakeke and&#13;
Aguleri-Umuleri conflicts, revolves around the causes and nature of conflict and the roles of&#13;
men as principal actors, with scant attention paid to the roles of women. This study was&#13;
designed to examine print media representation of the roles of women in the Ife-Modakeke&#13;
(1997-2000) and Aguleri-Umuleri (1995-1999) conflicts and explore their unreported roles&#13;
in both conflicts.&#13;
John Galtung’s War/Violence and Peace/Conflict Journalism Theory guided the study, while&#13;
the case study design was utilised. The heterogeneous sampling technique was employed to&#13;
generate data from five newspapers (Nigerian Tribune, Daily hampion, The Guardian, Punch,&#13;
and Daily Times), two magazines (TELL and The NEWS) between 1997 and 2000 for the IfeModakeke conflict, and the Aguleri-Umuleri conflict 1995 and 1999. The first two&#13;
newspapers were selected because of their proximity to the conflicting communities and&#13;
others for national spread. Fifteen Key Informant Interviews (KII) conducted with traditional&#13;
leaders (one traditional ruler and five chiefs), two ex-fighters, two elders, three union leaders,&#13;
one teacher and one researcher and four Focus Group Discussions (FGD) were purposively&#13;
selected for their roles in each conflict. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse the&#13;
quantitative data from print media, and a sixteen-item coding sheet comprising eight&#13;
analytical categories for each journalism frame was used to content analyse information from&#13;
news articles. Feminist curiosity was utilised to examine the camouflaged (unequal)&#13;
gendering of power in the unreported roles played by women from KII and FGDs.&#13;
The percentage-point difference in the categories of reportage between Ife-Modakeke and&#13;
Aguleri-Umuleri conflicts consists of straight news (76%; 70.19%), editorials (4.47%;&#13;
7.69%), Features (14.78%; 16.35 %) and letters to the editor (4.81%; 5.77%) respectively. In&#13;
both conflicts, women were represented as victims of destitution and displacement.&#13;
Conversely, their representation in the Ife-Modakeke conflict were as victims of rape,&#13;
divorce, riot and arson, while in the Aguleri-Umuleri conflict, they were portrayed as victims&#13;
of maternal mortality, forced marriages and subjects of traditional oaths to forestall&#13;
divulgence of security information to relatives. Unlike being represented as victims, women&#13;
in the Ife-Modakeke conflict were reported to be financers of peace-making initiatives, peace&#13;
petition writers and pellet removers. Likewise, in the Aguleri-Umuleri conflict, they were&#13;
reported as peace brokers and participants in traditional oath-taking to resolve the&#13;
conflict. The unreported roles of women in the four communities include similar roles&#13;
as petition writers, protesters, information sources, medical providers, and advisers. In&#13;
Modakeke and Ife communities, virgin girls and elderly women relied on juju to protect and&#13;
enable the male fighters at the battlefronts, while in Aguleri and Umuleri communities,&#13;
women served as disguised fighters and weapon-carrying aides.&#13;
Although the media largely portrayed women as victims in Ife-Modakeke and AguleriUmuleri conflicts, the women described themselves as advisers, enablers, protectors and&#13;
fighters. Therefore, journalists should interact directly with people in conflict settings to&#13;
understand and accurately report the roles of different actors.
</description>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Sep 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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