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Dele Giwa: The Unanswered Questions is a much-waited-for account from...
Religion Politics Power in Northern Nigeria is an analytic narrative of...
Casebook on Administrative Law is a compilation of cases and...
Military Leadership in Nigeria 1966-1979 examines the concept of...
The magical Booker Prize-winning novel that journeys between the land of...
This volume of autobiographical essays, now in paperback, is one of...
Richard Bourne has in this book, tackled the challenge with detailed research and admirable perspicacity. Recommended reading for all those interested in Nigerian history. – Emeka Anyaoku, Former Commonwealth Secretary-General
Mabogunje is a professor of geography, an intellectual of high repute. He received the 2017 ‘Nobel Prize for Geography’, the Prix Vautrin-Lud at the annual International Festival of Geography at Saint-Dié in north-eastern France. He was the first African president of the International Geographical Union. He is emeritus professor at the University of Ibadan.
A Mouth Sweeter than Salt gathers the stories and reflections of the early years of Toyin Falola, the grand historian of Africa and one of the greatest sons of Ibadan, the notable Yoruba city-state in Nigeria.
Special features help you make connections across chapters, societies, and time periods as you explore the people, places, and events crucial to understanding world history and its global context.
Under Three Masters is a narration of the eventful and career life of a super Nigerian administrator, Jerome Oputa Udoji. It is about the transfer and exercise of power in Nigeria.
The Tragedy of Victory: On-the-Spot Account of the Nigeria-Biafra War in the Atlantic Theatre is a chronological narrative of the war that lasted from July 6, 1967 to January 15, 1970.
The book contains essays written by four generations of Nigerian scholars. It is the first to examine the historical, political, economic and comparative dimensions of attempts by the military to restructure the Nigerian federation.
Nigeria:The Birth of Africa’s Greatest Country chronicles the social political events of colonial and immediate post-colonial Nigeria as recorded by Drum, the popular monthly magazine of those times.
This is an unprecedented reference guide to the development of Ibadan from the last years of true African autonomy in the early nineteenth century through the onslaught of British colonialism, all the way up until Nigeria's independence.
You Must Set Forth at Dawn is an intimate chronicle of his thrilling public life, a meditation on justice and tyranny, and a mesmerizing testament to a ravaged yet hopeful land. Paper Back pages: 655
This House of Oduduwa Must Not Fall represents a quest to share the ultimate eye-opening journey to the root of the problems of (the geographical entity called) Nigeria.
China is a superpower increasingly central to global economics, yet a generation ago it was a country characterized by poverty and chaos. This book is about the moment when everything changed.