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Journal article

Understanding the Work that 'Culture' does: A Comparative Perspective on Cultural Rights Provisions in the Constitution of Kenya 2010

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2018
AUC Library
Taylor & Francis Group
Oxon
Africa | Eastern Africa

This article analyses cultural rights provisions in the new Constitution of Kenya 2010 (CoK) in comparative perspective, as a background to other articles in this Special Issue that discuss the negotiation process within Kenya from which the constitution emerged in 2010, and the way in which various stakeholders have sought to use the new rights enshrined in the constitution. The CoK borrows widely from other constitutions and international law to tie together three conceptualisations of 'culture', associated with different rights and responsibilities at the national, group and individual level. At the national level, 'culture' represents aspirational values and principles that underlie the Bill of Rights and the new system of devolved, democratic governance. Culture as the basis for group membership is used as a rationale for devolution, but it is also used to recognise and protect the rights of minority groups within counties. Protecting individual cultural creativity and choice...

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