Appraisement of glocalisation in the context of Nigeria’s foreign policy: A concentric approach
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Date
2024
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Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cogent Arts & Humanities
Abstract
This paper examines the nexus between Nigeria’s foreign policy and
glocalisation. Glocalisation is an emerging concept in foreign policy discourse, with
the sole intent of forging a synergy between globalisation, global governance, and
local relations, hinging on domestic peculiarities. As it were, foreign policy has largely
projected the interest of the ruling class and other private interests rather than the
greater good regardless of the gains for the ruling elites, as posited by Jeremy
Bentham. The concentric model was the theoretical framework used by the study
to explain the levels of relation from the core to the periphery, a globalised foreign
policy to a glocalised foreign policy. Qualitative research methods were adopted for
this study, using secondary sources of data collection, and textual analysis. While
little or no attention has been paid to glocalisation efforts in foreign policy discourse
in Africa, it has been on the table of discussion for the western world, notwithstand
ing the current level of development occasioned by diplomatic relations worldwide.
Progressively, within foreign policy discourses, the need to glocalise foreign policy
cannot be overemphasised, as it marks the beginning of real polity as explained by
Aristotle, as against simply focusing on the localisation of globalisation.
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Keywords
glocalisation, core-periphery, Nigeria, foreign policy, concentric circle