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<title>MECHANISMS FOR THE MANAGEMENT AND RESOLUTION OF MARITAL CONFLICT BY NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS IN IBADAN, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2309</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2026 05:46:17 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-13T05:46:17Z</dc:date>
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<title>MECHANISMS FOR THE MANAGEMENT AND RESOLUTION OF MARITAL CONFLICT BY NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS IN IBADAN, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2310</link>
<description>MECHANISMS FOR THE MANAGEMENT AND RESOLUTION OF MARITAL CONFLICT BY NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS IN IBADAN, NIGERIA
ALA, Modupe Oziofu
Marital conflict is a major social challenge cutting across Africa, Nigeria, and prevalent in&#13;
Ibadan locality. There are governmental and non-governmental mechanisms for its management&#13;
and resolution, however complainants appear to prefer the services of Non-Governmental&#13;
Organisations (NGOs); utilising Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanisms which are&#13;
pro bono (no charges) fast and appear effective. Existing studies have focused more on&#13;
government mechanism (litigation) than the use of ADR. This study was, therefore, designed to&#13;
examine the use of ADR mechanisms for the management and resolution of marital conflict by&#13;
NGOs in Ibadan, Nigeria.&#13;
Theories of Structural-Functionalism and Human Needs provided the framework, while case&#13;
study method was adopted. Purposive sampling was used to select two prominent NGOs, namely&#13;
Federation of International Women Lawyers (FIDA) Oyo, and the Women’s Law Clinic (WLC),&#13;
University of Ibadan, whose core terms of reference are marital conflict management. Key&#13;
informant interviews were conducted with the two leaders of the organisations, while in-depth&#13;
interviews were held with 34 respondents: six volunteers/clinicians, 10 complainants and an&#13;
administrative staff each from the two organisations. Secondary data were derived from&#13;
newsletter publications supplied by the NGOs. Data were contently analysed.&#13;
The NGOs attend to all forms of marriage in Nigeria - statutory and traditional/nikah.&#13;
Cohabitation emerged unexpectedly as a trend in the cases they intervened in; with ADR&#13;
mechanisms of mediations, negotiation, and conciliation for conflicts caused by human basic&#13;
welfare needs. The ADR mechanisms were preferred to litigation which is the traditional method&#13;
because they provide options that reconcile couples without necessarily exposing the family to&#13;
the tedious process of litigation while desired needs were met. The process of ADR mechanisms&#13;
went through the stages of introduction, storytelling, mediation/negotiation/conciliation,&#13;
settlement, and monitoring. The mechanisms are interwoven in application such that the choice&#13;
of mechanism can be specific or a combination, depending on the nature or complexity of&#13;
conflict. For instance, mediation was used to resolve conflicts caused by scarce resources such&#13;
as financial support for mother and children. Negotiation was added in instances of value-based&#13;
conflicts like custody of children and in-laws intrusion in order to appeal to the ‘Ọmọlúàbí’&#13;
(appropriate conduct) of the husband because NGOs have no legal power to impose the&#13;
(recommendations) procedure. In other instances, when marital conflict had to do with&#13;
psychological needs like sex and ego which sometimes brought about threat to life, mechanisms&#13;
went beyond mere mediation to include negotiation and conciliation where complainants were&#13;
counseled on temporary separation to defuse tension. Although NGOs do not encourage divorce,&#13;
they would counsel separation when threat to life was involved. There was always an&#13;
achievement of management or resolution at any intervention, although in infinitesimal instances&#13;
parties truncate the process, and usually, where mechanisms proved abortive, couples were&#13;
referred to court.&#13;
The Alternative Dispute Resolution mechanisms utilised by Non-Governmental Organisations in&#13;
Ibadan have proven their effectiveness in marital conflict management, rescuing a number of&#13;
marriages from adversarial end product like divorce. Government could empower mediators&#13;
through legislation to prevent parties from truncating the process.
</description>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Nov 2018 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2018-11-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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