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The grabbed state: lawyers, politics and public land in Kenya*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 September 2012

Ambreena Manji*
Affiliation:
British Institute in Eastern Africa, PO Box 30710, Nairobi, Kenya

Abstract

In 2002, Kenya's new National Rainbow Coalition (NARC) undertook to investigate and ensure the recovery of all public lands illegally allocated by the outgoing government. A Commission of Inquiry into the Illegal and Irregular Allocation of Public Land, chaired by the lawyer Paul Ndung'u, was appointed. The commission's report sets out the illegal land awards made to powerful individuals and families, provides important information about the mechanisms by which public land was misallocated, and shows how the doctrine that public land should be administered and allocated ‘in the public interest’ was consistently perverted. This paper explores what the Ndung'u report tells us about the role of the legal profession in the illegal and irregular misallocation of public land. It makes clear that the legal profession, far from upholding the rule of law, has played a central role in land corruption, using its professional skills and networks to accumulate personal wealth for itself and others. This stands in contrast to the role of the legal profession in promoting good governance and the rule of law envisaged by donors of international development aid. This paper focuses on ‘local’ land grabbing, and argues that the ‘global land grab’ or ‘investor rush’ needs to be understood alongside local manifestations of land privatisation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

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Footnotes

*

I am grateful to Chris Day, Graduate Attaché at the British Institute in Eastern Africa 2011–12, for his invaluable research assistance. Thanks are due to Liz Alden Wily, Catherine Boone, John Harrington, Gabrielle Lynch, Mutuma Ruteere and Radha Upadhyaya for discussing this paper with me, and to the interviewees listed at the end of this paper for the important insights they provided. I am also grateful to the anonymous referees of JMAS for their detailed suggestions.

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Interviews

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Cottrell, Jill, academic; director, Katiba Institute, Nairobi, 26.10.2011.

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Mwathane, Ibrahim, former chairperson, Institution of Surveyors of Kenya; director, Land Development and Governance Institute, Kampala, 3.10.2011.

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Ubhi, Harpreet, partner, Daly and Figgs Advocates, Nairobi, 7.12.2011.

Wanguhu, Charles, African Centre for Open Governance (Africog), Nairobi, 12.10.2011.

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