Ethical Challenges of Authority in a Pluralistic Society
The Nigerian Example
					
	
		©1999
		Thesis
		
			
				
				212 Pages
			
		
	
				
				
					
						
					
				
				
				
					
				
				
			Summary
			
				Pluralism is more than difference in behavioral patterns. It is a fundamental difference in worldviews, and Nigeria typifies it. It implies that autonomous individuals within a societal continuum do not constitute an integral amalgamation of a body-politic. A multi-cultural, multi-religious, multi-ethnic and multi-lingual blend, Nigeria serves as a good laboratory for pluralist test. What Nigeria needs is authority in order to articulate these plural and conflicting world-views into a reasonable discourse or committed dialogue. It is then the challenge of authority in Nigeria to reconcile the apparent incompatibilities within the multiple groups into a reasonable consensus. Plagued with the pathological equivocations of human rights, incessant military coups and counter-coups, vicious ethnic discrimination and lack of regard for meritocracy, Nigeria stands as a classical example of a leaderless society. Derided by foes as a political patchwork, and portrayed by friends as a potential volcano, all that Nigeria needs is authority that can articulate her numerous but diversified potentials into a catalyst for human development. No sustainable political or social foundations could be laid in the absence of this desideratum.
			
		
	Details
- Pages
 - 212
 - Publication Year
 - 1999
 - ISBN (Softcover)
 - 9783631335628
 - Language
 - English
 - Published
 - Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1998. 212 pp., 1 tab.
 - Product Safety
 - Peter Lang Group AG