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Chidi Nzeadibe    &  Adaeze U.P Ejike-Alieji (2020)   Solid waste management during Covid-19 pandemic: policy gaps and prospects for inclusive waste governance in Nigeria. Local Environment,  https://doi.org/10.1080/13549839.2020.1782357  Abstract Solid waste management (SWM) is a public health service whose importance is often understated. When the solid waste management challenge is exacerbated by a public health emergency such as the Covid-19 pandemic, its real significance as an essential service becomes more apparent. The outbreak and spread of the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) has led to dramatic transformations of e very sector of the Nigerian society including SWM systems, where formal and informal actors co-exist often in an uneasy relationship. Unfortunately, strategies for inclusive management of solid wastes during and after the Covid-19 pandemic are lacking in Nigeria, fuelling the further exclusion of informal sector in t...
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Separatist Threat, Militarization and Voter Turnout: Exploring the Dynamics of the 2017 Governorship Election in Anambra State, Nigeria

Peter O. Mbah, Thaddeus C. Nzeadibe, Chikodiri Nwangwu, Ambrose O. Iheanacho, Christopher Okonkwo Eze and Christian C. Ezeibe Abstract Using the qual-dominant mixed methods approach, this study analysed the impact of the separatist threat and the militarization of elections on voter turnout during the 2017 governorship election in Anambra State, Nigeria. Findings indicate that perceived and real marginalization of the Igbo in Nigeria’s state-building is largely driving the neo-Biafra separatist threat to boycott elections in Anambra State. This does not only account for the state militarization of elections in order to guarantee security; it also inadvertently engendered fear among citizens, undermined voter turnout and exacerbated political exclusion. This study concludes that inclusive political development presents an opportunity for de-escalation of separatist threats, demilitarization of elections and enhancement of voter turnout in Nigeria.
Value reclamation from informal municipal solid waste management: green neoliberalism and inclusive development in Lagos, Nigeria 50 eprints available for download on this link: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/9E5XKMA5RKZMN99WBZS3/full?target=10.1080%2F13549839.2019.1663801&fbclid=IwAR3yc2G3NNe_bK7lnOarseo845OGwo9WmGuuMFD_p5gzxgtXPSFsj0AjSCA
[PDF]  from journals.ac.za Children, waste and well-being: A critical analysis of socio-environmental justice in almajirai solid waste management in Northern Nigerian Cities African Population Studies 32(2) Suppl 2, 4166-4182 Authors Ambrose O Iheanacho, Peter O Mbah, Precious C Onwuaha, Eberechukwu J Eze, Thaddeus C Nzeadibe
Beyond “traditional geographies”: Integrating urban political ecology and cultural sustainability into undergraduate geographical education in Nigeria   The Journal of Environmental Education , 49 (3),  228-241 Authors Augustina Chinyere Nzeadibe, Rose Nkechi Uchem, Thaddeus Chidi Nzeadibe This study utilized qualitative methods and the urban political ecology (UPE) framework to situate changes in scope and content of undergraduate geography curriculum in Nigeria within the domain of education for sustainability. It was stimulated by significant curriculum-related events in the geography department of the University of Nigeria, and strategic policy developments in research governance in the university. Having cultural sustainability as its overarching concern, the reform initiative focused on solid waste management (SWM), a challenge with roots in cultural activity. While engaging with students and linking cultural sustainability with SWM, it is argued that ...
UNN Researchers Guest Edit a Scopus-Indexed Journal A Special Issue of the journal,  African Population Studies/Etude de la Population Africaine  focusing on University of Nigeria Nsukka research and post-2015 development agenda has just been published  .  African Population Studies  is an open access journal of the Union for African Population Studies. It has been publishing regularly since 1986, and is indexed in Scopus ( SJR and SNIP ), IBSS, Bioline and many other international databases. The Volume 32, No 2 (2018) Supplement Special Issue of African Population Studies was guest edited by three researchers of the Faculty of the Social Sciences: Drs.  Chukwuedozie Ajaero, Chidi Nzeadibe & Christian Ezeibe. Publication of this themed issue by the Faculty of the Social Sciences is the first of its kind in an indexed international Journal. Thirty (30) academic staff of the University published their current research related to the SDGs in the s...

Urban Vulnerability of Waste Workers in Nigerian Cities: The Case of Aba, Nigeria

Thaddeus Chidi Nzeadibe,  Friday Uchenna Ochege in:  The Palgrave Handbook of Sustainability  pp 313-329  https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-319-71389-2_16 Abstract The centrality of waste collection and recycling to the lives of the poor in African cities in the post-2015 development era was the main motivation for this study. Unfortunately, the informal waste economy in Africa is generally excluded from mainstream of urban governance and socio-economic processes. As a result, vulnerabilities abound in the informal waste-based livelihoods. Using a case study of waste workers in the city of Aba in Nigeria, this chapter examines urban vulnerability as a converse to social sustainability of waste workers in Nigerian cities. While noting the relevance of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) 8 and 11 to urban sustainability of livelihoods of informal waste workers, the chapter argues that location within the urban area...