REFERENDUM IN NIGERIA AND SPAIN: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Abstract
Referendum is the act or principle of giving the people of a country the chance to state their opinionon some important matter by voting for or against such a matter in a universal franchise. It is also a demand by a group or section in a country or sovereign state to vote for or against an issue or issues for their benefit, growth and development especially when the group feels marginalized like the two jurisdiction under review-Catalans in Spain and the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) in Nigeria. This work will therefore discuss the causes of demand for referendum in the two countries. It will also bring to the fore the differences and similarities between Catalans in Spain and Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) in Nigeria. It is the finding of this work that there is no constitutional provision for the referendum on national disputes in the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. This omission does not represent the aggregate views of the generality of the citizens. Consequently, a number of conflicts have occurred and are still occurring which have claimed many lives. The research methods to be adopted will be amongst others analytical, comparative, doctrinal and historical.
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