What is Kenya becoming : dealing with mass violence in the Rift Valley of Kenya

dc.contributor.authorOmaada, Esibo S.
dc.date.accessioned2016-09-26T18:27:24Z
dc.date.available2016-09-26T18:27:24Z
dc.date.issued2015-10
dc.description.abstractThis policy brief is divided into three parts: research findings, policy analysis, and recommendations. Daily political and social processes determine what Kenya and Kenyans are becoming. The place where this becoming started was with colonial conquest and the resistance to conquest. The government needs to build institutions that nurture the direct participation in governance of the country by grass roots Kenyans, as well as by addressing the land question in order to reduce biases that reify ethnic identities and violence.en
dc.formatTexten
dc.format.extent1 digital file (12 p.)en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10625/55806
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMakerere Institute of Social Research, Makerere University, Kampala, UGen
dc.relation.ispartofMISR working paper; no. 27en
dc.subjectHISTORYen
dc.subjectLAND OWNERSHIPen
dc.subjectCOLONIALSIMen
dc.subjectGEOPOLITICSen
dc.subjectVIOLENCEen
dc.subjectCIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTSen
dc.subjectLAND POLICYen
dc.subjectDEMOCRATIZATIONen
dc.subjectKENYAen
dc.subjectSOUTH OF SAHARAen
dc.titleWhat is Kenya becoming : dealing with mass violence in the Rift Valley of Kenyaen
dc.typeSynthesis Reporten
idrc.dspace.accessOpen Accessen
idrc.project.componentnumber107453001
idrc.project.number107453
idrc.project.titleBeyond Criminal Justice: Toward a New Paradigm for Political Settlement in Africaen
idrc.recordsserver.bcsnumberIC36-1643402171-149019
idrc.rims.adhocgroupIDRC SUPPORTEDen

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