The Burning Ground
Oil and Militancy in Nigeria
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Columbia Global Reports
Publishing:28th May '26
£12.99
This title is due to be published on 28th May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

They killed her father for speaking out
For decades, the oil-rich Niger Delta—an important wetland and farming region—has seen its environment devastated by oil extraction that has brought little economic benefit to its people. After a nonviolent campaign for environmental and human rights, Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight colleagues were executed by the military dictatorship in 1995. Their deaths sparked an armed insurgency marked by sabotage and oil theft in a bid for “resource control.”
Thirty years after Ken Saro-Wiwa’s death, his daughter Noo traces the rise of this insurgency and how it became entangled with politics, further damaging the environment and upending social hierarchies. In The Burning Ground, she travels across the delta to examine its aftermath, speaking with former militants, highlighting the undervalued role of women, and meeting individuals working toward sustainable development. Along the way, her sharp, humane reporting brings to life a region where environmental damage, political conflict, human-rights pressures, and accelerating climate threats converge in ways the world cannot ignore.
“For decades, multinational petroleum conglomerates ignored the consequences of reckless resource extraction in the Niger River Delta until, in the early 2000s, rising militancy threatened to halt the machine altogether. With precision and humanity, The Burning Ground documents the reality of a drill, baby, drill economy—the multi-generational environmental and social damage that has led to intractable predicaments in the heart of Africa’s most populous country.” —Emily Witt, author of Health and Safety: A Breakdown
ISBN: 9781967190140
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
128 pages