Open Access
American Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
ISSN (Online): 2378-7031
DOI: 10.46568/arjhss
The Making of Oluwole: An Aftermath of Governance Failure in Nigeria
Abstract
The paper espouses the historical origin of the Oluwole phenomenon in Lagos Nigeria. The study
is a combination of desktop and surveying research. The desktop approach reviews existing literature on the
historical evolution of Oluwole phenomenon in Lagos, Nigeria. The survey approach involves researchers
as participants’ observer, soliciting for some landed documents and exchange of foreign currencies. Results
obtained were literary expressed and inferences made on them. Data solicited include the mode of operation
of Oluwole phenomenon actors, the operators, and their demographic, ethnographic and socio-economic
characteristics. The study reveals that Oluwole phenomenon as spatial and contextual challenges resulted from
dysfunctional governance exhibited in the nation’s political instability, ineffective physical planning and social
segregation within the built environment. The paper recommends for inter-governmental agency relationship
and co-operation, promotion of participatory governance, planning of socially inclusive cities among others, as
a way of preventing social environmental menace like the Oluwole phenomenon.