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<title>SOCIAL RELATIONS OF YAM FLOUR PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION IN LAGOS AND OYO STATES, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2195</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 16:37:33 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T16:37:33Z</dc:date>
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<title>SOCIAL RELATIONS OF YAM FLOUR PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION IN LAGOS AND OYO STATES, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2196</link>
<description>SOCIAL RELATIONS OF YAM FLOUR PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION IN LAGOS AND OYO STATES, NIGERIA
OLAWORE, Anjola Adejoke
Social Relations (SRs), the network of interactions among members of the society, is a vital&#13;
component of healthy partnerships among organisations worldwide. Conversely, egoistic&#13;
motivation for reward and numerous market and institutional failures have challenged healthy&#13;
relationships among people in informal organisations in Nigeria. Existing studies on SRs have&#13;
largely focused on formal organisations with scant attention paid to in informal organisations,&#13;
especially among actors in yam flour (èlùbọ́ ) production and distribution. This study, therefore,&#13;
examined the social relations (social organisation, exchange value construction, value chain&#13;
activities, indigenous practices and the socio-demographic characterisation) underlying yam flour&#13;
production and distribution in Lagos and Oyo states, Nigeria.&#13;
The Social Action Theory provided the framework, while the qualitative exploratory design was&#13;
adopted. Lagos and Oyo states were purposively selected due to yam production and distribution&#13;
linkages existing between them. Saki (Oyo) was purposively selected because it is the hub of yam&#13;
flour production, while Bodija and Orita-Merin (Oyo), Mushin-Alasalatu and Mile-12 (Lagos)&#13;
markets were purposively selected because of their high patronage of yam flour from Saki. Nonparticipant observation was conducted among actors involved in the production and distribution&#13;
of yam flour. Thirty in-depth interviews were conducted with 22 merchants, two each from&#13;
farmers, peelers and loaders, one each from transporters and farm landlords. Eleven key&#13;
informant interviews were conducted: one each from farmers, peelers, loaders, transporter and&#13;
farm landlords, and six with association executives. Three case studies were conducted with an&#13;
aged farmer, a farm landlord and a merchant. Three focus group discussion sessions were held&#13;
among farmers, farm landlords and merchants. Data were contentanalysed.&#13;
Èlùbọ́ production and distribution activities were organised and regulated through established&#13;
associations guided by both formal and informal rules. Formal rules were written in the&#13;
association constitution, while informal rules were unwritten norms and values. Affections and&#13;
emotions in the trade were ritualised and celebrated annually. Exchange values of transactions&#13;
were negotiated leveraging on mutually beneficial relationships. Activities and relationships&#13;
relative to the production and distribution chain were dependent as farmers, peelers, loaders,&#13;
merchants and transporters relied on one another to complete the production and distribution&#13;
process of èlùbọ́ . The merchants (olówò) were the main financiers of the value chain; thus,&#13;
rendering other actors, particularly the farmers, vulnerable. Indigenous practices, such as&#13;
traditional mulching, was used in soil management, while drying on mountains, cayenne pepper&#13;
or cassia leaves were used to preserve the èlùbọ́ . Èlùbọ́ production and distribution processes&#13;
engaged both male and female, old and young. However, farming and transportation were maledominated, while peeling and trading were dominated by females.&#13;
The quest for personal gains, market and institutional failures have challenged social relations in&#13;
yam flour production and distribution in Lagos and Oyo states, Nigeria. There is a need for an&#13;
actor centred policy formulation and implementation by governments. The appropriate authorities&#13;
should provide more intervention programmes to enhance social relations and yam flour&#13;
production and distribution.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2196</guid>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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