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Kenyan foreign and security policies : the Jomo Kenyatta presidency and legacy / Kipyego Cheluget and Stephen Wright.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Bloomsbury Academic, 2025Description: pages cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781666962413
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Kenyan foreign and security policiesDDC classification:
  • 327.6762 23/eng/20250430
  • 327.6762 23/eng/20250430
LOC classification:
  • DT433.562 .C484 2025
Contents:
Part I: The Setting Introduction: Foreign and Security Policies in Africa -- Chapter 1: Building the Kenyan State -- Part II: The Jomo Kenyatta Presidency, 1964-1978 -- Chapter 2: Growth and Development in an Evolving Political Economy -- Chapter 3: Domestic Actors in Foreign and Security Policies -- Chapter 4: Relations with Tanzania and Uganda within the East African Community -- Chapter 5: Security and Stability in Wider Eastern Africa -- Chapter 6: Expanding Trade Opportunities and Forging Security Partnerships -- Chapter 7: Policy and Reputation in Africa and International Organizations -- Part III: Legacies and Post-Kenyatta Foreign and Security Policies -- Chapter 8: In Jomo Kenyatta's Footsteps: Daniel arap Moi, 1978-2002 -- Chapter 9: Kenyan Foreign and Security Policies in the Twenty-First Century.
Summary: "Kipyego Cheluget and Stephen Wright evaluate the legacy of Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta. Following a nationalist uprising and brutal colonial repression, Kenya became independent in December 1963. With much of the agricultural land still under European settler control, Jomo Kenyatta promoted foreign and security policies to balance Kenyan, African, and settler interests, attracting foreign investment into the new country. Kenyatta's programs, however, favored the West and established a growing need for British and American security guarantees to sustain Kenya in an increasingly unstable Eastern African region. In this book, Cheluget and Wright show that despite the growing pressures within Kenyan civil society for diversification of policies and redistribution of economic wealth, Kenyatta consistently maintained pro-western policies until his death in 1978. This book is split into 3 parts. Part I discusses the growth of Kenyan nationalism, the end of the colonial era, and the birth of the Kenyan State. Part II considers the political economy and development strategies of the Kenyan State. Part III assesses the degree of continuity of the succeeding leadership portrayed from the Jomo Kenyatta presidency. Through this detailed analysis, the authors examine Kenyatta's policies and examine how successive Kenyan presidents have largely maintained his policies and venerated his legacy"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Normal Collection Joint Command and Staff College General Stacks Non-fiction DT433.562 .C484 2025 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available jcsc007180

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Part I: The Setting Introduction: Foreign and Security Policies in Africa -- Chapter 1: Building the Kenyan State -- Part II: The Jomo Kenyatta Presidency, 1964-1978 -- Chapter 2: Growth and Development in an Evolving Political Economy -- Chapter 3: Domestic Actors in Foreign and Security Policies -- Chapter 4: Relations with Tanzania and Uganda within the East African Community -- Chapter 5: Security and Stability in Wider Eastern Africa -- Chapter 6: Expanding Trade Opportunities and Forging Security Partnerships -- Chapter 7: Policy and Reputation in Africa and International Organizations -- Part III: Legacies and Post-Kenyatta Foreign and Security Policies -- Chapter 8: In Jomo Kenyatta's Footsteps: Daniel arap Moi, 1978-2002 -- Chapter 9: Kenyan Foreign and Security Policies in the Twenty-First Century.

"Kipyego Cheluget and Stephen Wright evaluate the legacy of Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta. Following a nationalist uprising and brutal colonial repression, Kenya became independent in December 1963. With much of the agricultural land still under European settler control, Jomo Kenyatta promoted foreign and security policies to balance Kenyan, African, and settler interests, attracting foreign investment into the new country. Kenyatta's programs, however, favored the West and established a growing need for British and American security guarantees to sustain Kenya in an increasingly unstable Eastern African region. In this book, Cheluget and Wright show that despite the growing pressures within Kenyan civil society for diversification of policies and redistribution of economic wealth, Kenyatta consistently maintained pro-western policies until his death in 1978. This book is split into 3 parts. Part I discusses the growth of Kenyan nationalism, the end of the colonial era, and the birth of the Kenyan State. Part II considers the political economy and development strategies of the Kenyan State. Part III assesses the degree of continuity of the succeeding leadership portrayed from the Jomo Kenyatta presidency. Through this detailed analysis, the authors examine Kenyatta's policies and examine how successive Kenyan presidents have largely maintained his policies and venerated his legacy"-- Provided by publisher.

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