A building under demolition in the Mathare informal settlement of Nairobi, Kenya.
Photo by LUIS TATO/AFP via Getty Images
In response to flooding that destroyed homes and displaced thousands in Nairobi’s informal settlements, the government has been evicting people living in riparian areas.
Kenyans protest against police extrajudicial killings in Nairobi in December 2022.
Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images
Alternatives to violent policing already exist in the daily practices of Nairobi residents who don’t depend on the police for safety.
Kenyans protest against extrajudicial killings in Nairobi’s Mathare area on 13 April 2022.
Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images
To move towards justice and peace, Kenya must disband all police units implicated in unlawful violence and punish criminal officers.
Women carry water buckets filled with water after fetching it from one of the illegal freshwater points in Mathare slum.
EPA-EFE/Daniel Irungu
Fetching water entails physical hardship that can often lead to mental agony and can sometimes even threaten a woman’s safety.
Residents of Kibera slum carry jerrycans to fill them with water from a bowser.
Gordwin Odhiambo/AFP via Getty Images
Despite high prices, poor quality and inconvenience, Kenya’s urban poor continued to buy water from private vendors because it’s still their best option.
New toilet blocks in Mathare Valley informal settlement in Nairobi.
Samantha Winter
Women in developing countries are burdened by the lack of access to proper toilets in their homes, communities, schools and public spaces.
Cheap private schools in low and middle income countries have increased dramatically.
Shutterstock/Birute Vijeikiene
Research explores why parents in Nairobi actively choose to send their children to private schools, despite the financial constraints.