Entrenching the Right to Participate in Government in Kenya's Constitutional Order

Entrenching the Right to Participate in Government in Kenya's Constitutional Order

Subtitle: 
Some Viable Lessons from the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights
Author: 
Mbondenyi, Morris Kiwinda
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of African Law
Source: 
Journal of African Law,Vol.55,no.1,2011,pp.30-58
Abstract: 

A practice of frequent constitutional amendments started shortly after Kenya attained her independence in 1963. Consequently, the country has witnessed a confusion of systems of governance, ranging from single-party autocracy to virtual multi-party democracy, which have served to endorse the chronic condition of human rights violations in the country. In the process of such experimentation, Kenyans have unabatedly been denied the enjoyment of many of their fundamental rights and freedoms, including the right to participate in their government. This article analyses Kenya's constitutional order with the intention of highlighting the extent to which the country's citizens have been denied the right to participate in their government. Drawing inspiration from the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights, the article recommends ways in which this right could be entrenched in the country's constitutional order.

Language: 
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CITATION: Mbondenyi, Morris Kiwinda. Entrenching the Right to Participate in Government in Kenya's Constitutional Order . : Cambridge University Press , . Journal of African Law,Vol.55,no.1,2011,pp.30-58 - Available at: https://library.au.int/entrenching-right-participate-government-kenyas-constitutional-order-3