3 research outputs found
Development of Family Therapy and the Treatment of Juvenile Delinquents: A Strategy to Curb Youths Violence in Rural South-South Nigeria
The South-South region of Nigeria has of late been a very volatile and insecure region. Incidence of youth’s violence spanning from cultism, militant activities, vandalism, arson, drugs violence etc. has risen to horrifying dimension. Most of these youths were juvenile delinquents who had graduated from mere disorderly conduct to fully grown dangerous youths who had made the streets in the urban centres and rural communities unsafe to dwell and do business. Despite the full scale war declared by the Nigerian security forces against these youths, their population and the frequency of their dangerous actions are still on the rise. This has left the government with the question of ‘what is to be done’ to curb the increasing spate of youths violence in the region. In line with this question, a clinical study has been carried out here to get a clearer picture of the situation in the region. In the face of these crises in the region this paper has come to the conclusion that development of family therapy and the treatment of juvenile delinquents will help to reduce the army of violent youths in the region. This approach will act as a check and subsequently transform such juvenile delinquents into useful youths and on the long run into responsible adults in the society; adults who will not take to criminality. This paper is a product of intense days of field research. Information from primary and secondary sources coupled with the residual knowledge of the researcher in this area made the study a success. Primary data were collected through face-to-face interview with detainees from various police cells across the region and some social workers in government Establishments and Ministries in charge of family and social welfare. The response at all levels was encouraging
Relationship between urban planning and flooding in Port Harcourt city, Nigeria; insights from planning professionals
Flooding is widely recognised as a global problem which has worsened in recent years due to climate change. In Nigeria, flooding remains the most widespread environmental disaster with the population of 200 million suffering numerous threats from perennial flooding. Port Harcourt in Southern Nigeria experiences annual flooding on a significant scale. While research has linked the flooding in Port Harcourt to poor urban planning, little research has engaged with planning professionals to investigate this relationship. This paper fills this gap. It explores how urban planning is linked to flooding in Port Harcourt and reports on qualitative research undertaken with five urban planners in Port Harcourt. The findings affirm that poor planning and/or lack of compliance with planning regulations are the main factors contributing to the flooding of Port Harcourt. The urban planners gave their expert opinions on how to control the flooding and unanimously agreed that improved planning practices could control the endemic flooding problem in the city. This implies
that the government needs to work more closely with urban planners and other stakeholders to effectively control and find a lasting solution to the flooding problem in Port Harcourt city
