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Abstract 

Despite the rising incidence of poverty in Nigeria and the increasing frequency of anti-government  protests driven by citizens’ inability to meet their basic food needs, there remains a notable gap in  research exploring the link between poverty and protest participation in Nigeria. Drawing on the  human needs theory and survey data from Afrobarometer, this study investigates how poverty – both at the individual and communal levels – relates to Nigerians’ willingness to participate in anti government protests. Individual-level poverty is assessed using an index capturing the frequency  with which respondents and their household members lacked access to necessities such as food,  water, cooking fuel, medicine, and income over the past year. Communal wealth is measured by the  mean annual nighttime light intensity within a 30 km radius of respondents’ dwellings. Regression  analysis reveals that higher scores on the Lived Poverty Index increase the likelihood of Nigerians  having protested in the previous year. Higher poverty scores also increase people’s willingness to  participate in future protests and reduce their likelihood of choosing not to protest. Likewise,  greater nighttime light intensity decreases individuals’ likelihood of having been involved in past  protests, reduces their willingness to participate in future protests, and increases their likelihood of  opting not to protest. These results are robust across different operationalisations of protest and to  the use of individual survey data covering 36 African countries.  

Daniel Tuki

Daniel Tuki is an independent researcher in Berlin, Germany.

Hussaini Kwari

Hussaini Kwari is an independent researcher in Lagos, Nigeria.