La première période de l'industrie pétrolière du Nigeria a été planifiée par les autorités coloniales britanniques . Plusieurs lois ont été passées qui donnaient au gouvernement colonial un accès privilégié à ce pétrole. A partir de 1971, le gouvernement fédéral du Nigéria prit un certain nombre de mesures législatives destinées à contrôler son industrie pétrolière. Ces mesures gouvernementales ainsi que leur impact sur l' industrie pétrolière nigériane sont analysées dans cet article. Ces analyses révèlent que malgré le changement intervenu dans le mode d'investissement des sociétés multinationales, leur domination de cette industrie n'en est pas pour autant réduite. Au contraire elle a non seulement augmenté mais elle a surtout renforcée leur contrôle sur ce secteur.
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Obi, C. and Kayode Soremekun 1993. 1 - The Changing Pattern of Private Foreign Investments in the Nigerian Oil Industry: by Kayode Soremekun . Africa Development. 18, 3 (Jul. 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v18i3.2627.
Cyril Obi, Research Department, Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Victoria Island, Lagos, Nigeria.
Cyril Obi is a program director at the Social Science Research Council (SSRC), Brooklyn, New York. He leads the SSRC’s African Peacebuilding Network (APN) and the Next Generation Social Sciences in Africa programs. He has published extensively on the political economy of oil, African peace, security, and development, globalization, environmental conflict and environmental security. The 2004 Claude Ake Visiting Chair at the Department of Peace and Conflict Research at the University of Uppsala, Sweden, Cyril Obi is also a recipient of fellowship awards from CODESRIA; African Studies Centre, Leiden; St. Antony’s College, Oxford University; Salzburg Seminar; and the SSRC. He also holds a 2020 Peace Distinguished Scholar Award of the International Studies Association (ISA), and is currently a research associate of the Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria, South Africa. He serves on the editorial boards of peer-reviewed journals, and has published extensively in the fields of international relations, African politics, peace, development, and security, and the political economy of oil in Africa.
Kayode Soremekun, Department of International Relations, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria.
Kayode Soremekun is a Nigerian academic, author, and the third vice chancellor of Federal University Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State. He assumed duty after the sacking of professor Isaac Asuzu by President Mohammadu Buhari who took over from Professor Chinedu Nebo, the pioneer Vice Chancellor.