6.
Is there evidence of regular, active public debate on issues of defence? If yes, does the government participate in this debate?
6a. Public debate
Score
SCORE: 50/100
Rubric
Nigeria score: 50/100
Score: 0/100
Outside government, there is no or extremely limited public debate among academia, opinion-formers, and CSOs about defence issues.
Score: 25/100
Outside government, there is occasional public debate among academics, journalists, opinion-formers, and CSOs about defence issues. Debate also addresses issues superficially, rather than persisting through in-depth and regular discussion.
Score: 50/100
Outside government, there is regular public debate among academics, journalists, opinion-formers, and CSOs about defence issues. However, debate often addresses issues superficially, rather than persisting through in-depth and regular discussion.
Score: 75/100
Outside government, there is occasional public debate among academics, journalists, opinion-formers, and CSOs about defence issues. However, when debate occurs, it addresses high priority issues with intensity and in-depth discussion.
Score: 100/100
Outside government, there is regular public debate among academics, journalists, opinion-formers, and CSOs about defence issues. Debate persists on high priority issues over a period of time, rather than being superficially addressed.
Assessor Explanation
Assessor Sources
6b. Government engagement in public discourse
Score
SCORE: 50/100
Rubric
Nigeria score: 50/100
Score: 0/100
There is no government engagement in public discourse about defence issues or official communications contain no meaningful information.
Score: 25/100
Where communication does occur, it is likely to be one-way: officials may provide some information but may not answer public questions.
Score: 50/100
The government engages in discussion with the public about defence issues through open forums, an active website, or at media briefings. However this does not happen regularly, or may exclude very important issues that the government chooses to avoid.
Score: 75/100
The government engages in regular discussion with the public about defence issues through open forums, an active website, or at media briefings.
Score: 100/100
The government engages in regular debate with academia, opinion-formers, and CSOs about defence issues in collaborative ways. The government co-organises discussions with independent think tanks or civil society organisations, or through joint media briefings.
Assessor Explanation
Assessor Sources
Compare scores by country
Please view this page on a larger screen for the full stats.
| Country |
6a. Public debate |
6b. Government engagement in public discourse |
|---|---|---|
| Benin | 25 / 100 | 75 / 100 |
| Burundi | 25 / 100 | 25 / 100 |
| Cameroon | 25 / 100 | 0 / 100 |
| Cote d'Ivoire | 50 / 100 | 50 / 100 |
| Ghana | 75 / 100 | 100 / 100 |
| Kenya | 75 / 100 | 25 / 100 |
| Liberia | 75 / 100 | 25 / 100 |
| Madagascar | 0 / 100 | 25 / 100 |
| Mali | 25 / 100 | 50 / 100 |
| Mozambique | 25 / 100 | 50 / 100 |
| Niger | 0 / 100 | 0 / 100 |
| Nigeria | 50 / 100 | 50 / 100 |
| Senegal | 75 / 100 | 50 / 100 |
| South Africa | 75 / 100 | 75 / 100 |
| South Sudan | 25 / 100 | 50 / 100 |
| Uganda | 25 / 100 | 75 / 100 |
| Zimbabwe | 25 / 100 | 0 / 100 |