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Prof. Paul J. Goldsmith, Ph.D

Anthropologist

Researcher

Author on African Studies

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Prof. Paul J. Goldsmith, Ph.D

Anthropologist

Researcher

Author on African Studies

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Recent Posts

  • Big Fat African Weddings: Commercialisation of Traditional Culture, and Its Consequences
  • Kenya’s Electoral Crisis: The Political Culture of Tricksters and Masks
  • Kenya’s Secession Non-Debate and the Shape of Things to Come
  • High and Low or Light and Dark: The Illumination of Northern Kenya and the New Digital Divide
  • Enter Cambridge Analytica; Public Asks, Kabila Gani?

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Kenya’s Secession Non-Debate and the Shape of Things to Come

September 21, 2017 Uncategorized by admin
Kenya’s Secession Non-Debate and the Shape of Things to Come

In this article, Prof. Goldsmith examines how the idea of secession in Kenya has repeatedly surfaced in political, academic, and public discourse — but often remains a “non-debate” in the sense that it is discussed more as a provocative idea than as a feasible policy option. He explores what motivates such discourse, where it comes from, and what it reveals about the deeper structural issues in Kenya’s governance and national identity.

Key Themes & Insights:

  • Recurring Secession Discourse
    Goldsmith notes that secessionist movements and rhetoric keep emerging in Kenya. While many are symbolic or rhetorical (rather than purely operational), such conversations—whether through articles, speeches, or social media—reflect discontent, especially among communities that feel excluded or marginalized. theelephant.info

  • The “Unhappy Marriage” Analogy
    He draws on public intellectual David Ndii’s framing of Kenya as an “unhappy marriage” in which partner communities feel that promises of national inclusion, fairness, and shared prosperity have not been fulfilled. The analogy helps illustrate how disillusionment with state structures or political elites often underlies secessionist thinking. theelephant.info

  • Legal & Constitutional Constraints
    The article points out that although secession is not recognized under Kenya’s constitution as a unilateral right, there are legal discussions and provisions that allow for public debate, self-determination, and amendments—but only under strict and difficult conditions. For example, secession would require constitutional amendments and broad consensus across many county assemblies. theelephant.info

  • Marginalization, Inequality & Disillusionment
    Many of the communities raising secessionist ideas are those who perceive themselves to have suffered uneven development, neglect, or broken promises over generations—regions where service delivery, infrastructure, political voice, or resources are perceived as insufficient relative to more central or privileged parts of the country. This sentiment is what fuels “non-debate” case makers. theelephant.info

  • Potential Outcomes & Warnings
    Goldsmith warns that the secession talk, while often academic or rhetorical, can become dangerous if left unaddressed. When people feel ignored, the gap between political promise and lived reality can become a trigger for unrest. He suggests that Kenya’s devolution, constitutional identity, equitable governance, and addressing historical injustices are essential to managing the tensions that secession discourse exposes. theelephant.info


👉 Read the full article on The Elephant →

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1 Comment
  • admin 12:49 pm October 14, 2025 Reply

    Just Testing

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