(3.15.229.113)
Users online: 7826     
Ijournet
Email id
 

Year : 2020, Volume : 14, Issue : 2
First page : ( 1) Last page : ( 13)
Print ISSN : 0973-9629. Online ISSN : 0976-4674. Published online : 2020 December 30.
Article DOI : 10.5958/0976-4674.2020.00006.3

Social Injustice, Corruption and Nigeria’s National Security Quest: A Theoretical Statement

Mr. Akinrinde Olawale Olufemi

Doctoral Fellow Nigerian Defence Academy Nigeria -Nigeria

Abstract

While across known histories of societies, the human societies had always developed within the confines of their limits of social justice, the security or otherwise of societies had always been directly proportional to their level of social justice. Invariably, this implies the higher the acceptance and recognition of the need for social justice by a society, the higher the society’s chances for national security. Social justice has thus proven to be a critical sine qua non for an egalitarian and a just society where equity, selflessness and equitable distribution of resources reign. However, the lack of, and deliberate emasculation of social justice within the society by the state and/or its machineries, has over time, consequentially informed a pathological situation; where, due to the absence or deliberate neglect of the need for social justice in the accumulation of wealth, distribution of wealth and resources as well as social, economic and political relations amongst the people, the rich are becoming richer whilst the less privileged are becoming more disadvantaged. The social implication and effect of this social pathology is the impulse by the rich or the privileged to weaponize and use corruption to accumulate more wealth whilst the poor and the less privileged tend to resort to, and use corruption as a leveler and means to accumulating their own share of the societal wealth, resources and power. The corrupt environment created by social injustice, as much as the socially unjust environment created by corruption, remains antithetical to any country’s quest for national security. This essay therefore argues that social justice backed by egalitarian and equitable distribution of wealth, resources and social services by the government would bring about a corrupt-free society where insecurity would be minimized and reduced to the barest minimum.

Top

Keywords

Corruption, Social Injustice, Insecurity, Nigeria’s National Security, Nigeria.

Top

  
║ Site map ║ Privacy Policy ║ Copyright ║ Terms & Conditions ║ Page Rank Tool
744,073,871 visitor(s) since 30th May, 2005.
All rights reserved. Site designed and maintained by DIVA ENTERPRISES PVT. LTD..
Note: Please use Internet Explorer (6.0 or above). Some functionalities may not work in other browsers.