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<title>THE SOCIAL COST OF FARMER-HERDER CONFLICTS IN ISEYIN, OYO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2193</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 19:10:30 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T19:10:30Z</dc:date>
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<title>THE SOCIAL COST OF FARMER-HERDER CONFLICTS IN ISEYIN, OYO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2194</link>
<description>THE SOCIAL COST OF FARMER-HERDER CONFLICTS IN ISEYIN, OYO STATE, NIGERIA
AROYEWUN, Abiola Omowunmi
Farmer-herder conflict is one of the most prevalent violent occurrences in West Africa with&#13;
attendant social cost, which include livelihood and socio-relational consequences. There have&#13;
been frequent farmer-herder conflicts in Nigeria, which have resulted in massive destruction&#13;
of lives and property. Most studies on farmer-herder conflicts have focused mainly on causes,&#13;
damages and casualties, with little attention paid to the social cost. This study, therefore,&#13;
examined the effects of the conflicts on farmer and herder livelihoods, family structure and&#13;
their symbiotic relationship, as well as the management structure employed to curtail farmerherder conflicts in Iseyin, Oyo State.&#13;
Group Conflict Theory was adopted as framework while the exploratory design was&#13;
employed. Purposive sampling technique was used to select communities that experienced&#13;
incessant farmer-herder conflicts at Iseyin. Snowball sampling technique was used to select&#13;
the farmer and herder respondents. Two key informant interviews were conducted with&#13;
leaders of farmers and herders. Sixty in-depth interviews were conducted with 30 farmers and&#13;
30 herders selected at Seraphim (6 farmers, 6 herders), Baale-sagbo (4 farmers, 5 herders),&#13;
Awaye (6 farmers, 6 herders), Aba-paanu (5 farmers, 5 herders), Olugbade (4 farmers, 5&#13;
herders), Sangote (2 farmers, 2 herders) and Alagbe (3 farmers, 3 herders). Data were contentanalysed.&#13;
The prevalence of farmer-herder conflicts had adversely affected four principal elements of&#13;
farmer and herder livelihood − security, income, health and education. Farmers and herders&#13;
lived in constant fear of attack and destruction of lives and property. Also, farmers had&#13;
witnessed significant decrease in farm produce because of the incessant destruction of farms;&#13;
and herders lost herds due to retaliatory rustling and poisoning. There was a reduction in the&#13;
income of farmers and herders owing to low output. Loss of income resulted in farmers’&#13;
failure to repay loans. Farmers accessed community healthcare, but herders had limited access&#13;
to health facilities. The children of farmers and herders experienced disruption of their&#13;
education as a result of their parents’ inability to pay the required fees. The families of both&#13;
farmers and herders lost male breadwinners and family members, and made unplanned&#13;
relocation to other communities. Prior to remarriage, farmers’ widows assumed the roles of&#13;
family heads but the widows of herders were integrated into the extended family structure.&#13;
Farmer-herder conflicts had made the symbiotic relationship of farmers and herders to&#13;
degenerate into inter-community mistrust and discouragement of inter-communal marriages.&#13;
It had also truncated intercommunity business relations. The conflict management strategies&#13;
adopted by the herders and farmers included reporting incidence of conflict to group leaders&#13;
and the police. That, in some instances, led to the compensation of aggrieved parties.&#13;
The social cost of the conflicts between farmers and herders in Iseyin had a debilitating&#13;
impact on their livelihoods and inter-group relations. Reports to group leaders and state&#13;
authorities had brought about some compensation and peace to the communities. Farmers and&#13;
herders should adopt conciliatory strategies to manage disagreements in peace and conflict&#13;
periods.
</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Mar 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-03-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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