Public Participation in Approving Cabinet Secretaries Nominees in Kenya
Abstract
This project paper investigates the place of public participation in the approval of Cabinet
Secretary (CS) nominees in Kenya. It argues that, although Articles 10 and 118(b) of the
Constitution of Kenya require public participation in the approval of CS nominees, the National
Assembly has failed to undertake meaningful public participation. The project paper defines
meaningful participation in the context of deliberative democracy theory which emphasizes on
deliberation in the process leading to a decision. In the absence of citizen deliberation, then
participation ceases to be meaningful. The project paper finds that since the Constitution of Kenya
2010 introduced public participation and parliamentary approval of nominees, there has been low
public involvement in the process.
The legal framework is also inadequate. The Public Appointments (Parliamentary Approvals) Act
, 2011 prevents robust participation as it limits the mode of public participation to submission of
affidavits only. Strict compliance with this modality limits participation by the illiterate, the poor
and persons with disabilities.
Low participation is also compounded by the lack of information and feedback. Scholarly literature
reveals that public participation is crucial in the attainment of democratic governance and
sustainable development. Until now scholars have paid little or no attention to the subject of public
participation in the approval of CS nominees in Kenya.
This project paper therefore contributes to the body of knowledge as it attempts to narrow this
knowledge gap by exploring public participation in the context of approval of CS nominees in
Kenya. It recommends the use of citizen deliberation to enhance meaningful participation in the
approval of CS nominees. The project paper utilized a mixed methods approach that entailed the
use of doctrinal, and case study methods to explore the subject of this research.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- School of Law [354]
The following license files are associated with this item:

