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NOTE FROM THE EDITOR
We are delighted to roll out the fi rst issue of the Jomo Kenyatta University of
Agriculture and Technology Law Journal (JKUATLJ). This Journal, edited by
the School of Law, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology
(JKUAT) is intended to be an annual peer reviewed publication providing a
platform for researchers, academicians, practitioners and students to share
knowledge through high quality theoretical research papers, law reviews and
case studies. The inaugural issue of the Journal has been devoted to scholarly
articles that will provide theoretical, practical and innovative ideas in the quest
to realise economic development in Africa, and particularly in Kenya.
A wide range of themes are addressed in two parts. The fi rst part contains article on
application of law to issues in science, technology and innovation. Thus, Jack Mwimali
and Paul Sena’s article explores the extent to which Kenya has developed the capacity
to tap into the carbon credit schemes so as to encourage foreign investments and also
to conserve the environment, while Asher’s Oluoch’s article examines the implications
of the legal framework governing agricultural subsidies within the East African
Community (EAC), arguing that the practice employed by countries within the EAC
tend to distort competition in the EAC. Michael Sang and Brian Sang, for their part,
argue for a multipronged strategy that takes into account the peculiar circumstances in
the source country and the end-market as the more promising approach to sustainable
conservation of the African rhino, while Faith Simuyu, in her article, seeks to demystify
the quest for the devolution of agriculture in Kenya by highlighting the indicators of
devolved governance in the Constitution of Kenya of 2013 and examining the extent
to which they have been incorporated in the agricultural sector, and Priscilla Musikali
and Lois Musikali explore the legal and policy framework for the regulation of M-Pesa
in Kenya.
In the second part, the Journal addresses some general concepts within the sphere
of human rights. Attiya Waris and Laila Abdul Latif examine the legal and fi nancial
responsibility in promoting health equity in Kenya; Peter Ademu Anyebe makes an
appraisal of the Fundamental Human Rights Enforcement Rules of 2009; Jotham
Okome Arwa, in his article, addresses matters concerning gay rights in Kenya in light
of the debate that arose during the state visit by the American President in July 2015,
exposing the fallacies that underlie the arguments advanced by both the proponents
and opponents of gay rights. In the fi nal article, Agbo Madaki reviews the works of the
Human Rights Violation Investigation Commission in Nigeria (otherwise known as
the “oputa panel”) for lessons in the application of transitional justice |
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