Nexus Between Political Culture And Women Participation In Politics In Nairobi And Kajiado Counties In Kenya, Since 2013

ABSTRACT

The main aim of this study was to examine the nexus between political culture and women

participation in politics since 2013 with a specific reference to Nairobi City and Kajiado

Counties in Kenya. The study described two counties in Kenya: one from urban area hence

cosmopolitan (Nairobi) and the other one from a rural setting and a bit of its region cosmopolitan

(Kajiado). The objectives of the study were (a) to examine the nature of political culture and

women participation in politics; (b) to analyse the political culture and women participation in

politics and (c) to discuss the challenges women face in political participation in Nairobi and

Kajiado counties in Kenya. The study was guided by feminist, social network, postmodernism

and political development theories. It used a descriptive survey design where the two counties

were described in the nexus between political culture and women participation in politics. Both

quantitative and qualitative methods were used. A questionnaire and an interview guide were

used. Random and purposive sampling techniques were used to select sample of the study. The

study sampled 240 respondents where 190 were female and 50 men since this was a study on

women. The analysis of the collected data established that the current political developments did

not favor women to contest certain elective posts, as the society viewed the aforementioned posts

to be a reserve for their male counterparts. Moreover, the study revealed that decision-making

structures were directly in the hands of the males and this hindered the ability of women to make

any impact in the political landscape. Further, the analysis of the collected data indicated that it

was clear that patriarchal structures within parties, state, and people‟s lives had deleterious

effects on the level of political participation by women and that cultural stereotypes labeled

against women continued to pervade the county of Kajiado to an extent that women were not

viewed as equal to men. Despite the structures put in place by the Kenya‟s constitution, 2010,

such as the two-thirds gender rule, the representation of women in leadership positions has been

low. Further, the study established that political culture and stereotypes against women

influenced their participation in politics. We recommended that men could play a significant role

in promoting gender equality policy development and that implementation of the two-thirds

gender rule would enhance women participation in politics, as more seats would be reserved for

them both at the national and county levels. In addition, we recommended that women should be

supported financially and socio-politically as an approach to countering the contemporary

political culture and political parties ought to formulate internal structures, which would ensure

that women played critical roles because the parties were the vehicles that propelled individuals

into leadership.