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Title
Statehood, sovereignty and identities: exploring policing in Kenya's informal settlements of Mathare and Kaptembwo |
Full text
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38791; http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2045 |
Date
2022 |
Author(s)
Wahome, Patrick |
Contributor(s)
Molony, Thomas; Cooper Knock, Sarah Jane |
Abstract
Academic work focusing on Kenya acknowledges that the state does not have a
monopoly in the everyday policing of informal settlements. Nevertheless, there is
limited scholarly focus on relationships between the different policing actors, the
outcome of their interactions, collaborations, contestations, and the implications for
the future of policing in Kenya. Few academics have examined how social categories
intersect and overlap to shape and construct everyday policing practices and
experiences in Kenya. This study seeks to fill these gaps.
Based on twelve months of inductive field research, I explore how the intersection of
multiple social categories shapes ways in which policing actors in Mathare and
Kaptembwo make claims, project power and enact different logics of order which coexist,
overlap and intersect. While other scholars have highlighted the significance of
ethnicity in policing in Kenya, I demonstrate its limitations and instead highlight the
importance of economic status, gender and age in negotiating everyday policing
practices.
Empirically I also analyse how some of the policing nodes are engaged in negotiating
statehood. I unpack in what ways legitimacy and sovereignty are negotiated,
contested, constructed, and reconstructed in Mathare and Kaptembwo. Following this
argument, I acknowledge the power of the political arrangements that we call the
Kenyan state and, at the same time, account for their elusiveness. |
Language
en |
Publisher
The University of Edinburgh |
Type of publication
Thesis or Dissertation; Doctoral; PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2022-03-28;09:54:02 |
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