Kenya’s Land Reform Agenda: Pastoralism within the Current Land Debate

This policy brief explores and argues for the enactment of a people-driven Community Land Act

Abstract

Kenya’s Community Land Bill could herald a new and improved approach to securing the rights of pastoralists to land, grazing and water. Devolving the governance of these resources to the local level could provide pastoralists with greater influence over decisions affecting their livelihoods.

This policy brief explores and argues for the enactment of a people-driven Community Land Act. The objective is to provide key observations and arguments that can help guide the process that will recognise and respect efficient management, control and use of community land. The process is informed by past practices and experiences whereby pastoralists in Kenya accessed land and natural resources through customary systems and institutions that operated largely outside the statutory legal framework of land administration.

Citation

Letai, J. Policy Brief No. 73. Kenya’s Land Reform Agenda: Pastoralism within the Current Land Debate. Future Agricultures Consortium Secretariat at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK (2014) 9 pp.

Policy Brief No. 73. Kenya’s Land Reform Agenda: Pastoralism within the Current Land Debate

Published 1 January 2014