Available Formats
Street Children in Kenya: Voices of Children in Search of a Childhood
By (Author) Philip L. Kilbride
By (author) Collette A. Suda
By (author) Enos Njeru
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th September 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Child welfare and youth services
Poverty and precarity
Housing and homelessness
Regional / International studies
362.73096762
Paperback
184
As kinship relationships and support networks across family lines weaken with modernization, economic stressors take a great toll on children. Kenya, like some other nations in Africa and around the globe, has witnessed a rapid rise in street children. The street children in Nairobi come from single parent families which are mostly headed by women. Another group are AIDS orphans. This study documents how street children in Nairobi follow survival strategies including (for boys) collecting garbage, and (for girls), prostitution. Gender is emphasized throughout the book. Although impoverished families are the most likely to produce street children, not all poor families have their children on the streets. The problem of street children is a complex one that calls for a comprehensive and coordinated policy and program for intervention at all levels and in all sectors of society. Alleviating poverty and rebuilding the family institution should be among the first steps in addressing the problem.
This book will be of interest to researchers in several disciplines, including African studies, cultural anthropology, family sociology, education, and childhood studies, as well as to a wide array of readers, including human rights advocates, and policymakers.-African Studies Quarterly
"This book will be of interest to researchers in several disciplines, including African studies, cultural anthropology, family sociology, education, and childhood studies, as well as to a wide array of readers, including human rights advocates, and policymakers."-African Studies Quarterly
PHILIP KILBRIDE is Chair and Professor of Anthropology at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania. COLLETTE SUDA is Associate Professor of Rural Sociology and Director, Institute of African Studies, University of Nairobi. ENOS NJERU is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology, University of Nairobi,Kenya.