This paper examines the relationship between electoral governance, institutional weakness, and conflict management in plural societies, using Nigeria as an empirical case study with a focus on Oyo State. Anchored in interdisciplinary peace and conflict studies, the article conceptualises elections as governance-embedded conflict systems in which political competition interacts with institutional performance and public perceptions of legitimacy. Drawing on qualitative analysis of electoral processes, institutional practices, and governance dynamics, the study demonstrates that electoral conflict in Nigeria is less an inevitable outcome of social diversity than a product of governance failures, including weak institutional credibility, inconsistent enforcement of electoral rules, and deficits of public trust. These conditions heighten the stakes of electoral competition and increase the risk of conflict escalation, even in contexts where large-scale electoral violence is relatively rare. By shifting analytical attention from identity-centred explanations to electoral governance as a mediating variable, the paper contributes to scholarly debates on elections, peacebuilding, and democratic consolidation in plural societies. It also offers policy-relevant insights for strengthening conflict-sensitive electoral governance, enhancing institutional legitimacy, and promoting sustainable electoral peace in Nigeria and comparable contexts.
ABEL ADEOLA ALAO (Sun,) studied this question.
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