Cassava Cake (Kpokpo-Garri) in Isoko North Local Government Area of Delta State, Nigeria.

OKPEKE, MERCY YEMI

Department of Agric. Extension and Management, School of Agric.

Delta State Polytechnic, Ozoro. Delta State, Nigeria.

E-mail: mercyokpeke@gmail.com; okpekemercy@yahoo.com   

ABSTRACT

The need to bridge the wide gap between inadequate food supply and increasing population rate in developing countries calls for addition of values to agricultural products by way of processing to avert huge amount of wastes in seasonal production. This had prompted this study on the value chain addition of cassava processing into edible starch and local cassava cake in Isoko north local government area of Delta state, Nigeria. Cross sectional data were collected using purposive and simple random sampling techniques with the aid of well-structured questionnaire for the 2012 processing season. Purposive sampling technique was used to select six towns from the study area based on their involvements in cassava processing activities. Thereafter ten (10) respondents were randomly selected from each of the towns making a total sample size of sixty (60) respondents. Data were analyzed using simple descriptive statistics such as mean, frequencies percentages and inferential statistics including gross margin and regression analysis. The results showed that all the respondents were females, the highest proportion (38%) of the respondents were of the age group of 50 years and above and 90% were illiterates, 75% of the respondents were widowed and 58% had household size within the range of 5>8 persons, 66% of them were into cassava processing on part-time basis, while 33% had 11 > 15 years of processing experience and about 90% used family labour. The estimated annual total revenue was N450,000,  total variable costs was N310,000 and the  gross margin was N140,000 per annum per respondent which represented 45.16% of the total variable cost of production. The implication was that for every one naira invested in the processing of cassava, the farmer gained 45 kobo. The result of the regression analysis revealed that 77% of the variability of the estimated revenue per annum (Y) was being accounted for by the independent variables in the specified model. Inadequate capital, lack of improved technology, inadequate processing and storage facilities, small sized enterprises with low earnings, poor markets characterized by low pricing of products were the major constraints encountered by the processors in the industry. It was therefore recommended that  credit facilities should be channeled to processors through the micro-credit scheme of the Delta State Government, Government policies should be modified to include the provision of training programme to disseminate scientific knowledge to cassava processors, the Research-Extension Farmer linkage should be strengthened to furnish the processors with modern processing techniques, Processors should form co-operative association to establish edible starch and local cassava cake  added value centres for improved and modern weighing and packaging methods, Government and non-governmental organizations/agencies should assist in educating the cassava processing farmers through effective extension system on improved cassava processing technology, to bring about improved production, marketing and profitability; and in doing so, improves livelihood, income, and food security of the people.

Keywords:  Cassava Processing, Value Chain, Gross margin, Regression analysis, Delta State, Nigeria.


Effect of Coal Mining on Agricultural Land of Maiganga Coal Mining Area, Gombe-Nigeria

1ADAMU  SANI  J., 2SABO AHMED, 2ALIYU  MELE  M. and 3MAHMOUD  AISHA  B.

1Department of Geography, Gombe State University, Tudun Wada Gombe, Gombe  State, Nigeria.

2Department of Environmental Management Technology, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi, Bauchi  State, Nigeria.

3Department Of Biological Sciences, Gombe State University, Tudun Wada Gombe, Gombe State, Nigeria.

E-mail: sanidaddy@gmail.com

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study is to identify the effect of coal mining on the agricultural land of maiganga coal mining area, Gombe-Nigeria. 75 questionnaires were administered to the locals, representing 15% of population of maiganga which is 300-500(2006 census). Percentage scores were used to analyze the data collected. The research has confirmed that 80% of the agricultural land at maiganga have been taking over by the coal mining company, 50% of the respondents agrees that there is a decline in their agricultural yield, 75% of the respondents agrees that there are new incidences of diseases, and also the research confirmed that 28% of the populace there are now unemployed because their farmlands have been taken over by the coal mining company. Therefore, the research recommend that government should make it compulsory the conduct of environmental impact assessment before the commencement of any developmental project even agricultural that is 50ha above to avoid a kind of damage that has been done to agricultural land at maiganga coal mine area.


Concurrent Caecal Coccidiosis and Bacteriosis in Slaughter Chickens in Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria

1GULANI, I.A., 2MOHAMMED, A., 1LAWAL, J.R., 2BIU, A.A., 1YAKAKA, W. 1ZANGO, M.K., AND MUSTAPHA, F.B.

1Department of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maiduguri, Nigeria

2Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maiduguri, Nigeria

E-mailbiuvet@yahoo.com

ABSTRACT The prevalence of concurrent coccidial and bacterial infections from caecal contents of slaughtered chickens was investigated in this study using saturated salt floatation technique and culture media standard bacteriological procedures. Out of the 450 caecal contents examined 63 (14%) had coccidian oocyts with severity scores of 1+ having 11 (17.5%), 2+ with 21 (33.3%), 3+ with 23 (36.5%) and 4+ with 8 (12.7%). Bacterial isolates were Escherichia coli with a prevalence of 6 (9.5%), Salmonella species mixed with E. coli 14 (22.2%), Enterobacter species mixed with E. coli 7 (11.1%), Klebsiella species mixed with E. coli 6 (9.52%), Staphylococcus aureus mixed with E. coli 8 (12.7%), Corynebacterium species mixed with E. coli 6 (9.5%) and Staphylococcus species mixed with E. coli 7 (11.1%). Antibiogram of the bacterial isolates showed that they were susceptible to ciprofloxacin, gentamycin, ofloxacin and resistant to erythromycin, nitrofurantoin and floxapen


Table of Contents

Nigerian Federalism and the Challenges of Ethnic Identity since the 1999

Democratic Era

Maiyaki M. Mejida                                                                                                                   1 – 15

The Implications of Vocationalizing the French Language for a Secured

and More Profitable Nation

Yekini Tokunbo M.                                                                                                                   16 – 26

Rebranding Inter-Religious Dialogues Between Muslims and Christians in Nigeria

Joshua Akintunde Owolabi                                                                                                      27 – 42

Liberal Democracy as the End of the World History: A Critique of

Fukuyama’s the End of History and the Last Man

Stephen Chijioke Nwinya                                                                                                        43 – 56

Christianity and African Culture (15th-21st Centuries): An Appraisal of the

Nigerian Milieu

Emmanuel Orihentare Eregare and Oluwatosin Blessing Ayanlowo                                       57 – 66

Transcending Moral Boundaries in Contemporary African Women’s Writings:

Feminism and the Disillusionment of the Sexually Autonomous  

Maureen Amaka Azuike                                                                                                          67 – 87

Nigerian Culture and Educational Empowerment in the 21st Century: A Quest

for Sustainable Development.

Iroulo, Lynda Chinenye, Ayanlowo Oluwatosin and Bello, Alice Adejoke                               88 – 101

The Wear and Tear of Bafanji-Balikumbat Wars, 1990-2000   

Hongie Godlove                                                                                                                       102 – 114


Nigerian Culture and Educational Empowerment in the 21st Century: A Quest for Sustainable Development. 

1Iroulo, Lynda Chinenye, 2Ayanlowo Oluwatosin and 3Bello, Alice Adejoke

1&2History & International Studies Department Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, Nigeria

3Department of Educational Foundation, Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, Nigeria

E-mail: lilylas4eva@yahoo.com; tinu4all2002@yahoo.co.uk;elsieade@gmail.com/+2348034015167

Abstract

Like most other social science concepts, the problem of identifying the term culture is evidently manifest in literatures. This is observed in the current pluralism of literature in culture, as being dominated by different schools of thoughts. However, most scholars would agree with a more inclusive definition of culture as the customs, beliefs, languages and social behaviours which comprise a society’s total way of life. This study looks at these cultural components as relate to Western education. The study examines culture and education as two inseparable terms and the effects of formal education on acculturation. It establishes the relationship between culture and education, the seemingly threatening effects of Western education on Nigerian culture and the need for the sustainable and amiable coexistence of the two entities for sustainable development of mankind. This work further reappraises the future of African culture in a rapidly westernizing world. It also attempts to provide answers to the issue of western education in Africa with Nigeria as a case study, and ascertains whether formal education mars or mends the continuity of culture among the literate Nigerians. The study adopts a descriptive and systematic method of content analysis using secondary and primary data analysed through qualitative method. Generally, the study promotes the value of culture in education, and thus advocating for intentional collaborative relationship of both entities among Nigerians. This will lead to a desirable turn of events, portraying the importance acculturation in education; thereby contributing to the holistic education which was unconsciously lost to colonization by Africans.


The Wear and Tear of Bafanji-Balikumbat Wars, 1990-2000

  

Hongie Godlove

Department of History

University of Douala, Cameroon  

E-mail: nhongiegodlove@yahoo.com

Abstract

Boundary conflicts between communities have made headline news in Cameroon since the dawn of multipartysm. Balikumbat and Bafanji villages in the Ndop plain, which are neighbours, have been the epicenter of such crises. While Balikumbat shares borders with Bamali in the north, Bamunkumbit in the west, Bambalang in the east and Bafanji in the south, Bafanji is bordered in the north by Bagam, south by Balikumbat, west by Bamunkumbit and east by Bambalang.  Prior to colonialisation, these villages hunted, fished, tapped and farmed across land limits that were mostly determined by natural features such as rivers, deep valleys, forests and swamps. Claim of sovereignty over a territorial piece was absent and occupation of a parcel of land was more temporary due to the practice of shifting cultivation. However, with colonialism, the Germans established formal boundary between Bafanji and Balikumbat in 1910, later traced and demarcated by the British in 1933, and confirmed with slight modifications by the post-colonial administration in 1969. Obviously, demographic explosion rendered land an issue of contention between these communities hence land usage changed from need to greed. This new paradigm in land custom resulted in border crises whose politicization with the advent of multipartysm produced two cataclysms between both villages in the 1990s. This paper intends to argue that these wars between Balikumbat and Bafanji brought perils and ruins to the area and peoples. Primary, secondary and oral sources were used to get the data while chronological and analytic methods were used to weave the findings.


Transcending Moral Boundaries in Contemporary African Women’s Writings: Feminism and the Disillusionment of the Sexually Autonomous

Maureen Amaka Azuike

Department of English

Faculty of Arts, University of Jos, Plateau State.

Email: amakaazuike@gmail.com

Abstract

This paper articulates women’s unwise resolve to exceed the limits of acceptable moral and sexual behaviour in our society, as reflected in contemporary African fiction. The purpose of this paper is, thus, to re-examine feminist ideologies of old and to give fresh insights on issues of immorality, gender and sexuality in African women’s writings in a world so promiscuous that it has created a disillusioned generation. The paper also focuses on the disillusionment experienced by the sexually autonomous female in African women’s creative narratives, whose radical decisions and immoral choices made in desperate attempts to overcome patriarchal oppression and sexual objectification have led her into a quagmire and into absolute ridicule.  It is on feminist theory that this paper is underpinned. This paper concludes, therefore, that ancient and modern feminist ideologies are threatening to derail the feminist train on a global scale, unless urgent steps are taken to avert the cataclysmic end towards which feminism is headed.

Keywords:  Feminism, Immorality, Gender and Sexual Autonomy, Disillusionment, Contemporary Women’s Writings.


Christianity and African Culture (15th-21st Centuries): An Appraisal of the Nigerian Milieu

 Emmanuel Orihentare Eregare and Oluwatosin Blessing Ayanlowo

Department of History & International Studies

Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, Nigeria

E-mail: dr.eregare@gmail.com; Tinu4all2002@yahoo.co.uk

Abstract

Before the coming of the Christian missionaries in the mid fifteenth century to Nigeria, every ethnic group advocated her own separate indigenous religion, which ranged in conventional beliefs and practices as relative to each community. Simply put, the indigenous people of Nigeria believed in divine beings which they feared, popularly labelling them as ‘gods of instant retribution’. This belief maintained peace and orderliness in varied communities. However, the introduction of Christianity and the concept of “supreme being” – “Christ” changed the traditional worldview of Nigerians towards the deities. Most importantly, the concept of the divine and forgiveness towards sinners converted them in their numbers. This Christianity later world view appears thus to have given way to clandestine activities in Nigerian society. Christianity appears to be obnoxious to the tedious and inhumane sacrifices which were commonly practiced in traditional religious worship.

Keywords:  Christianity, African Culture (15th-21st Centuries), Appraisal, Nigerian Milieu


Liberal Democracy as the End of the World History: A Critique of Fukuyama’s the End of History and the Last Man

Stephen Chijioke Nwinya

Department of Philosophy and Religion

Ebonyi State University, Abakaliki

E-mail drsteveinya@gmail.com 

Abstract

The beauty of liberal democracy is highly appreciated especially in comparison with other political systems that stood as rivals before the evolution of liberal democracy to its current state. Arguably, democracy has displaced most of its rivals. Hence, Francis Fukuyama was moved to conclude that evolution of liberal democracy and its displacement of rival political systems are enough indication that liberal democracy has sated the desire of the human nature and therefore brought the world history to abrupt termination. This text is a critical review of Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last Man to ascertain the veracity of his claim. To achieve this, an exposition of the views of the precursors of speculative world history was necessary. The investigation revealed that inasmuch as the beauty of liberal democracy is not in doubt, its current status cannot be said to have satisfied the yearning of the human nature and called for caution in the propagation of the system as championed by the West. Thus evolution of ideology which speculative world history represents is still open-ended.


Rebranding Inter-Religious Dialogues Between Muslims and Christians in Nigeria

Joshua Akintunde Owolabi

Department of Religious Studies,

University of Ibadan, Oyo State Nigeria

Abstract

Nigeria needs rebranding dialogues in all areas of life, especially in the religious atmosphere. The religious crises that many States experienced in the country have spoiled good things, notable among them are loss of lives and property. The inter-religious dialogue between Muslims and Christians needs rebranding. This will bring back peace, unity, love, cordial social relation, truthful interaction, mutual trust, harmony and tranquility. The study adopts descriptive survey research design. Both questionnaire and unstructured interviews were used as instruments for data collection. Recommendations were made at the end of the analysis.


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