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Journal Article

IDS Bulletin 47.1

Men and Women of Words: How Words Divide and Connect the Bunge La Mwananchi Movement in Kenya

Published on 11 January 2016

How does a movement for social justice, whose members are mainly drawn from the lower economic strata of society, build and sustain its power in the face of co-option, and social and geographical division? Members of the Bunge La Mwananchi movement in Kenya explored this question using action research.

The movement carves spaces for debate and activism in the urban public sphere accessible to the unrepresented masses. The authorities leave these spaces mostly unmolested, in part because co-option by politicians and civil society organisations is as effective at wrong-footing the movement as mass arrests and riot police would be. The research reminded the members that the movement’s power has always lain in its efforts to reach across internal divisions of ethnicity, gender, class and geography. As the research connected the debaters in one site with those in another, it demonstrated how communicative enquiry works to create solidarity within this most grass-roots of movements.

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IDS Bulletin 47.1

Authors

Patta Scott-Villiers

Research Fellow

David Calleb Otieno

Nathaniel Kabala

Patta Scott-Villiers

Gacheke Gachihi

Diana Muthoni Ndung’u

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
journal
IDS Bulletin, volume 47, issue 1
doi
http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/1968-2016.109
language
English

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