Sub-national Involvement in Nigeria's Foreign Relations Law: An Appraisal of the Heterodoxy between Theory and Practice

O. Omiunu, Ifeanyichukwu Azuka Aniyie
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Abstract

Nations, in their interaction with the international system, usually have in place a legal regime governing the external exercise of the powers of the state. This regime Curtis Bradley describes as the foreign relations law (FRL) architecture of a state. In a conventional FRL system, plenary powers for the conduct of international relations reside with the central government. For countries operating a federal system of government, the centripetal and centrifugal dynamics inherent in this system of government pose a serious challenge to this orthodoxy. More so, catalysed by globalisation, subnational governments (SNGs) in federal systems are increasingly affecting the reception and operation of international norms and acting as ‘paradiplomatic’ actors in the foreign relations sphere. This emergent trend has led to a growing body of scholarship that considers individual and comparative case studies across different jurisdictions. Focusing on Nigeria as a case study, this article evaluates recent empirical evidence that shows an increase in external interactions by Nigeria's SNGs in the FDI sector since 1999. The article argues that these external interactions by Nigeria's SNGs are a deviation from the conventional constitutional configuration of Nigeria's FRL setup wherein plenary powers for foreign relations have been allocated to the Federal Government (FG).
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尼日利亚对外关系法中的次国家介入:理论与实践的异质性评价
各国在与国际体系的互动中,通常都有一个管理国家对外行使权力的法律制度。柯蒂斯·布拉德利(Curtis Bradley)将这一制度描述为一个国家的外交关系法(FRL)架构。在传统的FRL制度中,处理国际关系的全体权力属于中央政府。对于实行联邦政府体系的国家来说,这种政府体系固有的向心力和离心力对这种正统观念构成了严重挑战。更重要的是,在全球化的推动下,联邦系统中的国家以下各级政府越来越影响国际规范的接受和运作,并在外交关系领域扮演“准外交”角色。这一新兴趋势导致越来越多的学者考虑不同司法管辖区的个人和比较案例研究。本文以尼日利亚为例,评估了最近的实证证据,这些证据表明,自1999年以来,尼日利亚国家国民政府在外国直接投资部门的外部互动有所增加。文章认为,尼日利亚SNG的这些外部互动偏离了尼日利亚FRL设置的传统宪法配置,在该配置中,外交关系的全体权力已分配给联邦政府。
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