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22 Soc. & Legal Stud. 3 (2013)

handle is hein.journals/solestu22 and id is 1 raw text is: 





Article
                                                                     Social & Legal Studies
                                                                            22(1) 3-23
Satire       and      the     Politics                              K The Author(s) 2012
                                                                   Reprints and permission:
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of Corruption                in   Kenya                      DOI: 10.1 17710964663912458113
                                                                         sls.sagepub.com
                                                                           OSAGE

John Harrington
University of Liverpool, UK; British Institute in Eastern Africa, Kenya

Ambreena Manji
Keele University, UK; British Institute in Eastern Africa, Kenya




Abstract
Corruption in Kenya has been a matter of intense concern for foreign donors and the
international financial institutions. External efforts to change the 'governance culture' in
this regard are not simply instrumental, composed of material restrictions and incentives.
They are also inherently rhetorical, seeking to establish the plausibility of a set of values
rooted in political economy. This paper examines two widely reported speeches of a
former British High Commissioner that can be read together as a highly figurative satire on
political standards in Kenya. Having developed a reading of anti-corruption governance as
satire, we extend it to the role of the legal profession in the illegal and irregular allocation
of public land. We argue that, as well as demonstrating an application of the rhetorical
analysis of neo-liberal governance, the case of land grabbing in Kenya also highlights the
instability of many of the key binary oppositions underpinning dominant anti-corruption
strategies. This instability can be understood in rhetorical terms by drawing on the work
of post-colonial writers and critics on the category of excremental satire. Rather than a
clear binary opposition, these suggest the interrelation, or more precisely the mutual
contamination, of corruption and normal capitalist accumulation.


Keywords
Governance, rhetoric, excremental satire, primitive accumulation, Constitution of
Kenya 2010, legal profession, land grabbing






Corresponding author:
John Harrington, British Institute in Eastern Africa, PO Box 307 10, Nairobi 00100, Kenya.
Email: john.harrington@liv.ac.uk

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