Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution

Struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution brought into alliances disparate movements from below, sections of middleclass, and factions of political, economic and religious elites, in challenging the government. The emergence of these alliances presents useful cases for examining the d...

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Main Author: Jacob Mwathi Mati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2017-03-01
Series:Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/mcs/article/view/5284
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spelling doaj-4c286fc04b604c358bcaa68e6343d8762020-11-24T21:54:00ZengUTS ePRESSCosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal1837-53912017-03-019110.5130/ccs.v9i1.52843296Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitutionJacob Mwathi Mati0School of Social Sciences, The University of the South Pacific (Fiji) & SWOP, University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa) Struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution brought into alliances disparate movements from below, sections of middleclass, and factions of political, economic and religious elites, in challenging the government. The emergence of these alliances presents useful cases for examining the dynamic relationship and politics between these movements, and also for probing social movement theory. Specifically, given the centrality of identity consciousness in movements, how were intrinsic class, religious, gender, generational and ethnic identity interests, contestations and cleavages overcome to enable inter-identity alliances in these struggles? More critically, how relevant are the dominant social movement theories in explaining this phenomenon? Is theoretical straightjacketing useful for analysing movements with such diversity? Drawing from in-depth interviews and existing literature on Kenyan constitutional reform struggles, this paper illustrates how alliances between the different identities and movements were forged to allow for a common struggle. The paper further illustrates that while political opportunity structures explain certain aspects of this phenomenon, framing, civic education and community organising strategies were critical enablers for collective identity formation https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/mcs/article/view/5284Constitution reform strugglesinter-class allianceinter-identity alliancePolitical opportunityframingCivic Education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacob Mwathi Mati
spellingShingle Jacob Mwathi Mati
Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution
Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Constitution reform struggles
inter-class alliance
inter-identity alliance
Political opportunity
framing
Civic Education
author_facet Jacob Mwathi Mati
author_sort Jacob Mwathi Mati
title Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution
title_short Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution
title_full Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution
title_fullStr Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution
title_full_unstemmed Emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution
title_sort emergence of inter-identity alliances in struggles for transformation of the kenyan constitution
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
issn 1837-5391
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Struggles for transformation of the Kenyan constitution brought into alliances disparate movements from below, sections of middleclass, and factions of political, economic and religious elites, in challenging the government. The emergence of these alliances presents useful cases for examining the dynamic relationship and politics between these movements, and also for probing social movement theory. Specifically, given the centrality of identity consciousness in movements, how were intrinsic class, religious, gender, generational and ethnic identity interests, contestations and cleavages overcome to enable inter-identity alliances in these struggles? More critically, how relevant are the dominant social movement theories in explaining this phenomenon? Is theoretical straightjacketing useful for analysing movements with such diversity? Drawing from in-depth interviews and existing literature on Kenyan constitutional reform struggles, this paper illustrates how alliances between the different identities and movements were forged to allow for a common struggle. The paper further illustrates that while political opportunity structures explain certain aspects of this phenomenon, framing, civic education and community organising strategies were critical enablers for collective identity formation
topic Constitution reform struggles
inter-class alliance
inter-identity alliance
Political opportunity
framing
Civic Education
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/mcs/article/view/5284
work_keys_str_mv AT jacobmwathimati emergenceofinteridentityalliancesinstrugglesfortransformationofthekenyanconstitution
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