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Street Children in Kenya: Voices of Children in Search of a Childhood
 
 
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Street Children in Kenya: Voices of Children in Search of a Childhood [Hardcover]

Philip L. Kilbride (Author), Enos Njeru (Author), Collette A. Suda (Author)

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Book Description

March 30, 2000 0897895290 978-0897895293

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.



Editorial Reviews

Review

"Street Children in Kenya provides an in-depth examination of the experences of street children in Naiobi, Kenya....[T]his book's publication is well timed then, given the urgency of this issue and the fact there is a growing number of organized initatives, as well as increased media attention....[T]his 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 policy-makers. The examination of the gritty everyday lives and mapping of the urban terrains or "geographies of exclusion"(Sibley, 1995) inhabited by these children make for compelling reading and calls upon the reader to take action or become more involved in advocating for the rights of all children."-African Studies Quarterly

Book Description

Gives an in-depth picture of the realities of life for the thousands of street children in Nairobi, who are only one component of the growing worldwide problem of homeless children.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
There are recurring features in the lives of street children everywhere in the world, including Kenya. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
fellow street children, street children problem, other street boys, most street children, other street children, kinship fostering, many street children, parking boys, egg incident, surveyed children, survival sex, street girls, ethnographic realism, children off the streets, glue bottle
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mama Ford, Jevanjee Gardens, Rescue Dada, Feed the Children, Bishop Kuria, Daily Nation, Kibagare Village, Bryn Mawr, Mathare Valley, University of Nairobi, Enos Njeru, Rift Valley, South Africa, Childlife Trust, Kenyatta Avenue, Maasai Village, United States, Virginia Bamurange, Kenyatta Market, Lewis Aptekar, Moi Avenue, Philip Kilbride, Tobias Hecht, Westlands Lane
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