Speaking of Trust: Religion and Mutual Aid in Southwest Kenya
By (Author) Teodor Zidaru
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Zed Books Ltd
21st August 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Religion and beliefs
Development economics and emerging economies
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Since independence in 1963, Kenya has seen the steady growth of mutual aid arrangements; a practice which creatively combines market logic with redistributive politics and older forms of reciprocity and solidarity. As a means to providing welfare and pursuing joint economic activity, mutual aid has flourished - despite the failures of neoliberal statecraft, and deepening asymmetries of power and wealth between and within different ethnic groups and has been largely built up using a language of religious faith. This book examines the often overlooked entanglements and affinities between emerging models of formal and informal finance and welfare with longer-running religious structures and concerns. Observing that many aspects of Christian and indigenous religious life play an integral part in shaping how Kenyans save, lend, distribute, fundraise, and entrust money and value in collective arrangements, Speaking of Trust illuminates and analyses the complex and innovative ways in which Kenyans are reimagining and renegotiating the terms of interdependence across social divides.
Teodor Zidaru was an Economic and Social Research Council PhD student and is now an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Anthropology, LSE, UK. He carried out fieldwork on religion and economy in southwest Kenya. His thesis documented the role of narratives about trust and faith in coordinating and negotiating mutual aid.