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ABSTRACT
This study sets out to examine the nature and dynamics of Nigerian Cameroonian relations in the aftermath of the Green Tree Agreement of 2006. Specifically, the study sought to investigate how the Bakassi conflict between Nigeria and Cameroon affected their relations between 2006 and 2015 from a system-centric analytical approach. Similarly, the study sought to explore the grassroots dynamics and dialectics of human security in the context of the conflictual relations between Nigeria and Cameroon with a view to establishing how such conditions affected the bilateral relations between the two countries. Furthermore, the study equally sought to determine and analyze the role of stakeholders-personalities and/or political decision-makers in both Nigeria and Cameroon in influencing the dynamics and trajectories of the Bakassi conflict in the post-2006 era. The paper discovered in details the factors that underline the Nigeria Cameroon border relations before and after the ruling of the International Court of Justice ceding Bakassi Peninsula region to Cameroon. Also, it examined the contemporary claim of some communities in Cross River State, Nigeria to Cameroon.