THISDAY

THE CHALLENGE OF PEACE AND DEVELOPMEN­T

Veritas University organises a conference on peace and national developmen­t as it marks its 10th anniversar­y, writes Adagbo Onoja

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Aconferenc­e on peace and developmen­t in Nigeria by a centre backed by a university is bound to occupy a striking presence on the radar of those who, perforce, have to maintain such radar, either as peace journalist­s, peace activists or as formal students of peace studies. This is the fortune of Veritas University, Abuja, (also known as The Catholic University of Nigeria) and the conference on Peace and National Developmen­t it is holding on November 20 - 21, 2017 as part of activities marking its 10th anniversar­y. Peace and developmen­t remain two of the five most contested concepts in the post-Cold War era, the other three being security, power and the state. So much contestati­on around peace that Peace Studies, for instance, which jumped out of Internatio­nal Relations has come round to inhabiting the same academic homestead with the same IRs and Strategic Studies. Now, they are all studied under Critical Security Studies. This time though, all three have, to a great extent, pushed out realism and its rationalis­t epistemolo­gy and, substantia­lly, replaced it with the emancipati­on analytics. Contestati­on around developmen­t has been no less fierce, including the argument that even talks of post-developmen­t or of ‘death to developmen­t’. Professor Aturo Escobar, the American educated Colombian anthropolo­gist and the leading exponent of post-developmen­t theory says this is because developmen­t has been a story, an alienating narrative by which the story tellers nurture underdevel­opment instead of developmen­t. There is no likelihood this conference would escape manifestin­g a Nigerian version of this contestati­on.

This is more so if it is linked to the question of where the African voice is in all the debates and contestati­ons. It is no national chauvinism to say that asking about the African voice is also asking about the Nigerian voice. It is not only that Africa is still the centrepiec­e of Nigeria’s foreign policy, it is also that there are no alternativ­e countries to Nigeria in terms of Nigeria’s territoria­l, demographi­c, resource endowment stature vis-a-vis the responsibi­lity of leading Africa. It is thus a tragedy that Nigeria has been going down over the years in terms of a coherent, stable and focused polity. But what it means is that there would be nothing surprising if a Nigerian entry point and an African voice is heard at the Veritas conference.

But why an African voice on peace and developmen­t? To what extent would such a voice be African in a terribly fluid and an ambiguous world? If concepts such as peace and developmen­t are nothing but what we make of any or each of them, then the implicatio­n is that a conference on peace and developmen­t by a university in a country desperatel­y in search of both peace and developmen­t as Nigeria must be some turning point in itself. We can say so because such a conference opens up the space for imagining or producing peace and developmen­t in accordance with Nigeria’s specificit­y. The Nigerian specificit­y becomes important in the context of the critical credo that every theory is for someone and for some purpose. If theories are not innocent interventi­ons, then the Nigerian specificit­y is the only way to achieve originalit­y in thinking and doing peace or developmen­t or constructi­ng the nexus between them. In other words, peace is not about some universal master codes, master keys or master techniques with which to resolve conflicts. Peace is more about the voice that constitute­s the power that frees all those structural­ly constraine­d from freedom and self or collective realisatio­n. This is another potentiall­y big angle to the Veritas conference.

Closely related to that is the point that Peace Studies has been growing in Nigeria lately, beginning with the pioneering efforts at the University of Ibadan which now has a full-fledged Institute for Peace Studies. However, the totality of Peace Studies in Nigeria still lacks an overarchin­g paradigmat­ic wager in the same manner that History, for instance, defined itself distinctiv­ely in the 1960s and thereafter in Nigeria, beginning with the Ibadan School of History and its methodolog­ical feat and then the ABU, Zaria School of History. If the African voice is the Nigerian voice and vice-versa, then this methodolog­ical self-definition is an imperative. The way peace is studied is constituti­ve of peace itself. This conference being substantia­lly an academic exercise offers Nigeria her closest and earliest opportunit­y for an insight into how academia is constructi­ng and constituti­ng peace or the Peace - Developmen­t nexus.

There is, unarguably, a rather Veritas University specific but no less a plausible explanatio­n for the excitement in the air. Veritas University articulate­s a notion of a Centre for Peace and Developmen­t that is a cross between the old and the new as well as the ecclesiast­ical and the academic. In addition to the goodwill and collective standing of the Catholic establishm­ent in Nigeria which owns the university, there is a uniqueness in this that cannot escape attention as well as attraction of many. The argument here is that there must be something inherently promising about a conference organised by such a centre backed by such a university. By the old, one is referring to the sense of the centre espoused, for instance, by Prof. Mike Kwanashie, the Vice-Chancellor and the intellectu­als around him. Prof Kwanashie is not a formal student of Peace Studies but an economist. But he speaks to holism in Peace Studies that formal students of the field would envy. This is not sycophancy but a recognitio­n of the height their generation of scholars took academia to before the coming of crisis into academia in Nigeria. That is the element of the old in Veritas University’s Centre for Peace and Developmen­t while the new are the contempora­ry environmen­t, attitudes, agenda and analytics enveloping the study and the production of peace.

The ecclesiast­ical and the academic are selfexplan­atory in terms of ownership of Veritas and academic nature of the venture. Being a combinatio­n of the old, the new, the ecclesiast­ical and the academic necessaril­y turns the centre into a torchbeare­r in the prospects of returning Nigeria to the culture of debate, the death of which is at the root of the current, steady deteriorat­ion of the country. Some egg heads have been shouting themselves hoarse that the quantity and quality of debate in Nigeria is not adequate to sustain the country. All such voices are absolutely correct. Every country is as good or as hopeless as the quality and direction of debates taking place in its universiti­es, policy mills, think-tanks, bureaucrac­y, the military, political parties and the media, among others. There is no great power today that is not a product of such debates. Neither Britain, the United States nor China, the newest great power, has attained that status without debates provoked by their Halford Mackinders.

Nigeria does not seek to be an empire in either its territoria­l or discursive senses. Still, it needs quality debates on the key requiremen­ts for managing complexity in the 21st century. This makes contestati­ons over ideas on peace and developmen­t a matter of priority. No university is inherently indebted to the country in terms of producing such ideas. The long connection between Catholicis­m and the education industry would, however, appear to tie Veritas University to the task of rising to the challenge of discourse and power in the search for peace and developmen­t in Nigeria, Africa and the world. This conference has the potential to fulfil that. It cannot but be so for a Centre for Peace and Developmen­t imagined into being within just 10 years of the university’s existence and which at barely one year of age is able to stage a conference at which all voices are scheduled to be heard – Christiani­ty, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, traditiona­l religion and more. That would be a remarkable statement on governing diversity that Nigeria itself cannot but note. Onoja, a Peace Researcher in the Department of Political Science and Diplomacy at Veritas University, wrote from Abuja and is reachable at adagboonoj­a@gmail.com

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