Nigerian Political Elites and the Covid-19 Pandemic’s Management Deficits: Implications for Nigeria’s Sustainable Development Goals
Nigerian Political Elites and the Covid-19 Pandemic’s Management Deficits: Implications for Nigeria’s Sustainable Development Goals
Author(s): Olawale Olufemi Akinrinde, Bolaji Omitola, Usman TarSubject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Government/Political systems, Health and medicine and law, Economic development
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: Covid-19; Nigerian Political Elites; Economic Development; Sustainable Developments Goals; Nigeria
Summary/Abstract: The impact of the novel Covid-19, otherwise known as the coronavirus on the entire spectrum of Nigeria’s national life, as elsewhere, remains yet indelibly unquantifiable at present. Thanks to the Elite culpability in the management of the corona-virus epidemic that has now rendered the entire Nigeria’s national life halted and, on the brinks of spontaneous discontinuity. Conceptualized in this study to mean negligence of duty, this study unpacks how the Nigerian political Elites and leadership’s inefficiency has contributed inversely to the eventual outbreak, sporadic rise and the negative consequences of Covid-19 on the entire populations’ Nigeria’s economic and sustainable development goals. Drawing from David Hume’s theory of causation, this study discovers that leadership and Nigerian political elites’ failure in the management of the Covid-19 pandemic, before and during its eventual outbreak and manifestation in Nigeria triggered the incident Covid-19 case in Nigeria, and its manifold effects on Nigeria’s prospects for the actualization of her economic and sustainable development pursuits.
Journal: Studia Politicae Universitatis Silesiensis
- Issue Year: 2021
- Issue No: 33
- Page Range: 115-132
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English