Abstract
This paper examines the implementation of the Humanitarian-Development-Peace (HDP) Nexus in conflict-affected regions of Northern Nigeria. The HDP Nexus represents a coordinated framework that seeks to integrate emergency humanitarian assistance, sustainable development, and peacebuilding efforts. In the context of Northern Nigeria—marked by Boko Haram insurgency, farmer-herder conflicts, and communal violence—the study explores both the systemic obstacles and the latent opportunities for operationalizing the Nexus. Relying on a qualitative, desk-based methodology, grounded in functionalism and systems theory, the paper analyses secondary data from scholarly literature, policy documents, and field-based reports. Findings reveal that fragmentation among actors, bureaucratic hurdles, and local capacity constraints hinder the development of cohesive interventions. However, localized initiatives such as the Communities in Taraba and Adamawa States (COMITAS) project illustrate the transformative potential of integrated, community-led approaches. The study concludes that while the HDP Nexus holds promise for long-term stabilization and recovery, its success depends on strengthened local ownership, sustained funding, institutional coordination, and the mainstreaming of conflict sensitivity. Seven actionable recommendations are provided to support more coherent and effective Nexus implementation in Nigeria’s conflict-prone regions.

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