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Climate Change And Governance In Kogi State, Nigeria (1999–2023)

ナイジェリア・コギ州における気候変動とガバナンス(1999~2023年) (AI 翻訳)

Joseph Olugbenga Obadofin, Joshua Segun

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)ジャーナル2026-04-08#気候リスクOrigin: Global
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18909244
原典: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18909244

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本研究は、ナイジェリア・コギ州における1999年から2023年までの気候変動の影響と政府対応を評価。洪水や高温による避難、生計喪失、インフラ被害が明らかになったが、政府の対応は事後的かつ短期間に限られ、長期的な脆弱性低減には不十分だった。気候変動主流化と適応政策の強化を提言。

English

This study assesses climate change impacts and government responses in Kogi State, Nigeria from 1999 to 2023. Findings show recurrent flooding and extreme heat causing displacement and infrastructure damage, but government measures were reactive and short-term. The paper recommends mainstreaming climate change into development planning and strengthening adaptation policies.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

ナイジェリアの州レベルの事例研究であり、日本のGX政策や開示制度(SSBJ、有報など)との直接的な接点は薄い。ただし、気候ガバナンスの脆弱性が適応不足につながる点は、日本の自治体の気候変動適応計画にも示唆を与える。

In the global GX context

This paper provides a case study of climate governance challenges in a developing country context, highlighting the gap between reactive disaster response and proactive adaptation. While not directly relevant to global disclosure frameworks like TCFD or ISSB, it underscores the importance of institutional capacity for climate resilience, which is a growing concern in global adaptation discourse.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Researchers studying climate governance in developing countries can use this as a case study of institutional weaknesses and adaptation gaps.

🏛政策担当者:Policymakers in climate-vulnerable regions may learn from the identified need to mainstream climate adaptation into long-term planning.

📄 Abstract(原文)

Climate change has become a major governance challenge in Nigeria, with Kogi State experiencing recurrent flooding and rising temperatures due to its location at the confluence of Rivers Niger and Benue. This study examines climate change and governance in Kogi State between 1999 and 2023, with the objective of assessing the nature of climate change impacts and evaluating the effectiveness of government responses across different administrations. The study is anchored on governance theory, which explains how institutional capacity, coordination and policy choices shape environmental outcomes. A qualitative research design was adopted, relying on secondary data from government reports, academic journals, news articles and publications of national and international organisations. The findings reveal that flooding and extreme heat have caused widespread displacement, loss of livelihoods and damage to infrastructure, particularly in Lokoja and riverine communities. Although successive state governments implemented measures such as emergency relief, resettlement projects, flood barriers and institutional collaborations, most responses were reactive and short-term, with limited impact on reducing long-term vulnerability. The study concludes that climate change impacts in Kogi State are closely linked to governance weaknesses, including poor planning, weak enforcement and inadequate adaptation policies. It therefore recommends mainstreaming climate change into state development planning, expanding permanent resettlement programmes, strengthening flood and heat mitigation infrastructure, improving local government capacity and sustaining partnerships with relevant stakeholders to enhance climate resilience and sustainable development in Kogi State.

🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース

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