Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya

Includes bibliographical references (leaves 66-70). === This study examines the influence of socio-economic inequalities on the probability of conflict in Kenya and aims to synthesise various causal hypotheses in the literature. This research extends to a regional analysis of a cross-national sample...

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Main Author: Rono, Lorraine
Other Authors: Viegi, Nicola
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9008
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-90082020-10-06T05:11:14Z Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya Rono, Lorraine Viegi, Nicola Applied Economics Includes bibliographical references (leaves 66-70). This study examines the influence of socio-economic inequalities on the probability of conflict in Kenya and aims to synthesise various causal hypotheses in the literature. This research extends to a regional analysis of a cross-national sample to understand the extent to which structural cleavages account for a cause of potential conflict in Kenya. The post-election violence that emerged in 2008 shed light on the urgency for policy reforms to address the root causes of what was viewed as an imminent outbreak of violence. Various analysts trace the origin of conflict to nepotism, ethnic stratification, historical injustices, poor governance and disparities in resource allocation. Given these sources of dissent, this study proposes that the most fundamental factors that considerably influence the probability of conflict in Kenya are pervasive poverty and extreme inequality, intensified by ethnic divisions. Based on Kuznets theory, we argue that the booms of economic growth experienced from 2003 perpetuated the stark economic and social inequalities prevalent in Kenya. As a result, there is strong evidence that suggests that these sharp inequalities fuelled the post-election violence and deeply influence the probability of conflict in Kenyan society. Another key contribution from the study is the conclusion that the existence of sharp horizontal inequalities result in a bias towards ethnic conflict. It is imperative to identify the underlying causes of conflict so as to neutralise polarisation which exacerbates tension and breeds further conflict. In light of this view, the probability of conflict in Kenya can be minimised effectively and such mitigation can be used as a mechanism for future growth and economic development in Kenya. 2014-10-31T18:02:31Z 2014-10-31T18:02:31Z 2009 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9008 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Commerce School of Economics
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Applied Economics
spellingShingle Applied Economics
Rono, Lorraine
Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya
description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 66-70). === This study examines the influence of socio-economic inequalities on the probability of conflict in Kenya and aims to synthesise various causal hypotheses in the literature. This research extends to a regional analysis of a cross-national sample to understand the extent to which structural cleavages account for a cause of potential conflict in Kenya. The post-election violence that emerged in 2008 shed light on the urgency for policy reforms to address the root causes of what was viewed as an imminent outbreak of violence. Various analysts trace the origin of conflict to nepotism, ethnic stratification, historical injustices, poor governance and disparities in resource allocation. Given these sources of dissent, this study proposes that the most fundamental factors that considerably influence the probability of conflict in Kenya are pervasive poverty and extreme inequality, intensified by ethnic divisions. Based on Kuznets theory, we argue that the booms of economic growth experienced from 2003 perpetuated the stark economic and social inequalities prevalent in Kenya. As a result, there is strong evidence that suggests that these sharp inequalities fuelled the post-election violence and deeply influence the probability of conflict in Kenyan society. Another key contribution from the study is the conclusion that the existence of sharp horizontal inequalities result in a bias towards ethnic conflict. It is imperative to identify the underlying causes of conflict so as to neutralise polarisation which exacerbates tension and breeds further conflict. In light of this view, the probability of conflict in Kenya can be minimised effectively and such mitigation can be used as a mechanism for future growth and economic development in Kenya.
author2 Viegi, Nicola
author_facet Viegi, Nicola
Rono, Lorraine
author Rono, Lorraine
author_sort Rono, Lorraine
title Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya
title_short Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya
title_full Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya
title_fullStr Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from Kenya
title_sort socio-economic inequality and ethno-political conflict : evidence from kenya
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9008
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