Equality in Kenya’s 2010 Constitution: Understanding the Competing and Interrelated Conceptions

Equality in Kenya’s 2010 Constitution:

Understanding the Competing and Interrelated Conceptions

By Victoria Miyandazi

This book makes a significant contribution to the ongoing global conversations on the various understandings of equality. It illuminates the many ways in which diverse equality guarantees clash, or are interrelated. It also sets out principled approaches on how they can be coherently interpreted to address the myriad inequalities in Kenya.

Taking a comparative approach, the book considers how other jurisdictions including the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, South Africa, India and Botswana have approached the conceptualisation, interpretation and application of various equality concepts.

The book focuses on important issues such as:
- transformative constitutionalism in relation to the interpretation of Kenya's 2010 Constitution;
- expanding the list of enumerated grounds for non-discrimination;
- affirmative action;
- accommodating religious and cultural diversity versus gender equality;
- the interrelation between socio-economic rights and status-based equality.

Victoria Miyandazi is Researcher for the Oxford Human Rights Hub, UK.

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