Adoption of Community Security Initiatives against Protracted Insecurity in Laikipia North, Kenya. Journal of Research on Humanities and Social Sciences
Abstract
This article interrogates the underlying factors that cause communities residing in areas affected by communal
conflicts in Laikipia North, Kenya, to embrace community security initiatives as a way of addressing protracted
insecurity. In the context of peripheral territories such as Laikipia North, security as a right is contested due to
factors such as protraction of insecurity, civilian militarization, and overall absence of the state as a security
provider. Critical to the study is the understanding that the state as a political entity is impacted by a myriad of
geo-political, security and socio-economic forces. These geo-political, security and socio-economic forces may
compromise the functionality of the state as far as fulfilling its mandate to the citizens is concerned. In this
regard, the adoption of community security initiatives raises fundamental questions as to whether the state has
failed to deliver on its mandate of providing security, given that Kenya is a functioning state. This
phenomenological study aimed at examining the underlying forces that inform internal security experiences
among communities in communal conflict regions. Specifically, the study explored the post-2010 factors in
relation to state of (in)security in Laikipia County. The study used qualitative approach in which data was
collected using FGDs, interviews and observation checklist. Data was analyzed thematically in line with the
objectives of the study.