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The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector

Intra-state distribution of monetary and non-monetary benefits from resource extraction among multiple entities is a subject of considerable interest in natural resource law. Drawing mainly but not exclusively from international human rights and environmental law, this study explores the nature, cor...

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Main Author: Singoei, Abraham Korir
Other Authors: Mostert, Hanri
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Private Law 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Singoei, Abraham Korir
author2 Mostert, Hanri
author_browse Mostert, Hanri
Singoei, Abraham Korir
author_facet Mostert, Hanri
Singoei, Abraham Korir
author_sort Singoei, Abraham Korir
collection Thesis
description Intra-state distribution of monetary and non-monetary benefits from resource extraction among multiple entities is a subject of considerable interest in natural resource law. Drawing mainly but not exclusively from international human rights and environmental law, this study explores the nature, core content and models of benefit sharing in the extractive sector in Kenya. The study establishes that central to the push for benefit sharing is the desire to realise justice – commutative, distributive or compensatory – for resource-host communities and regions. Kenya is an ideal case study related to benefit sharing because of its recent adoption of multi-level governance known as devolution. From this lense of multi-level governance, the thesis assesses whether such a system aids or impedes the effective distribution of resource benefits to host regions and communities, a factor critical to mitigating resource conflict. The thesis examines Kenya's legal regime governing benefit sharing from the colonial period to the present. This historical review demonstrates the significant impact that Kenya's Constitution adopted in 2010 has produced in entrenching benefit sharing in the norms and institutions of the state. It attributes the enhanced legal and policy recognition of benefit sharing not merely to the text of the Constitution but to the role played by semi-autonomous territorial units, known as counties, in shaping emerging norms and standards on benefit-sharing through a wide range of strategies including legislation, litigation and information dissemination. Where countiestake a proactive role in shaping the manner in which resource costs and benefits are distributed in law, responsive legislative outcomes can be realised. Conversely, where counties fail to seize their institutional position to aid resource impacted communities' engagement with policy opportunity structures, national institutions and resource operators are likely to default to historically exclusionary and paternalistic approaches to benefit sharing. The legal and institutional gaps evident in Kenya's mineral and petroleum legislative regime are largely a function of this dynamic. In examining the response of two resource-host counties in Kenya-Turkana and Kwalethe study demonstrates the need for counties to make pro-community policy choices in ensuring that constitutionally mandated monetary and non-monetary benefits are accessed at the local level. The study validates the utility of benefit sharing as an enabler of stable resource development environment especially when its impact is experienced through local economic development within host regions and communities.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36590 The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector Singoei, Abraham Korir Mostert, Hanri private law Intra-state distribution of monetary and non-monetary benefits from resource extraction among multiple entities is a subject of considerable interest in natural resource law. Drawing mainly but not exclusively from international human rights and environmental law, this study explores the nature, core content and models of benefit sharing in the extractive sector in Kenya. The study establishes that central to the push for benefit sharing is the desire to realise justice – commutative, distributive or compensatory – for resource-host communities and regions. Kenya is an ideal case study related to benefit sharing because of its recent adoption of multi-level governance known as devolution. From this lense of multi-level governance, the thesis assesses whether such a system aids or impedes the effective distribution of resource benefits to host regions and communities, a factor critical to mitigating resource conflict. The thesis examines Kenya's legal regime governing benefit sharing from the colonial period to the present. This historical review demonstrates the significant impact that Kenya's Constitution adopted in 2010 has produced in entrenching benefit sharing in the norms and institutions of the state. It attributes the enhanced legal and policy recognition of benefit sharing not merely to the text of the Constitution but to the role played by semi-autonomous territorial units, known as counties, in shaping emerging norms and standards on benefit-sharing through a wide range of strategies including legislation, litigation and information dissemination. Where countiestake a proactive role in shaping the manner in which resource costs and benefits are distributed in law, responsive legislative outcomes can be realised. Conversely, where counties fail to seize their institutional position to aid resource impacted communities' engagement with policy opportunity structures, national institutions and resource operators are likely to default to historically exclusionary and paternalistic approaches to benefit sharing. The legal and institutional gaps evident in Kenya's mineral and petroleum legislative regime are largely a function of this dynamic. In examining the response of two resource-host counties in Kenya-Turkana and Kwalethe study demonstrates the need for counties to make pro-community policy choices in ensuring that constitutionally mandated monetary and non-monetary benefits are accessed at the local level. The study validates the utility of benefit sharing as an enabler of stable resource development environment especially when its impact is experienced through local economic development within host regions and communities. 2022-06-30T16:09:17Z 2022-06-30T16:09:17Z 2022 2022-06-30T16:06:36Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36590 eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle private law
Singoei, Abraham Korir
The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector
title_full The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector
title_fullStr The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector
title_full_unstemmed The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector
title_short The impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit-sharing laws in Kenya's extractive sector
title_sort impact of government decentralisation on the development and implementation of benefit sharing laws in kenya s extractive sector
topic private law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36590
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AT singoeiabrahamkorir impactofgovernmentdecentralisationonthedevelopmentandimplementationofbenefitsharinglawsinkenyasextractivesector