Empowering urban margins: community-driven capital mobilization for land tenure security in Nairobi's Baba Dogo Informal Settlement
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Date
2026-01-01Author
Wahiga, E.
Kasuku, S.
Type
ArticleLanguage
en_USMetadata
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In Nairobi’s informal settlements, land tenure insecurity perpetuates poverty, eviction risks, and limited service access. This study examines Baba Dogo in Ruaraka Sub-County, where undocumented claims, bureaucracy, and socio-economic vulnerabilities hinder investments. Amid rapid Sub-Saharan urbanization, community-based organizations (CBOs) mobilize financial and social capital—through savings groups, microfinance, cooperatives, and trust networks—to secure land rights. Using mixed methods (78-household survey, key informant interviews, focus groups, and secondary data), findings show 80.8% ownership claims, though 69.2% lack documentation and 98.7% perceive insecurity. CBOs improved credit access by 40% via SACCOs, secured long-term possession for 20% through Community Land Trusts, and formalized 35% of leases through Akiba Mashinani Trust. These actions averted evictions for 50% of participants and improved 45% of housing and service conditions. While limited by a small sample and single-site focus, the study advances understanding of community-led tenure strategies and supports policies integrating CBO participation and hybrid tenure models.
URI
https://uonjournals.uonbi.ac.ke/ojs/index.php/ahr/article/view/3248http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke/handle/11295/168074
Citation
Wahiga, E., & Kasuku, S. (2025). Empowering Urban Margins. AFRICA HABITAT REVIEW, 20(3), 3648-3665.Publisher
AHR
