Sera na Sauti

Sera Na Sauti

Sera na Sauti is about making sense of the world—through books, dialogue, and the stories that define us. seranasauti.substack.com

Episodes

  1. Gikomba's Informal Economy: Livelihoods and Environmental Costs of Secondhand Clothing with Mwangi Mwaura

    11/05/2025

    Gikomba's Informal Economy: Livelihoods and Environmental Costs of Secondhand Clothing with Mwangi Mwaura

    How did a market built through dispossession become central to the everyday livelihoods of millions of East Africans, yet remain one of the country’s most precarious and contested urban spaces? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, Ruth Nyakerario, a researcher and writer whose work centers on urban marginality, displacement, and informal systems, speaks with Mwangi Mwaura, a PhD candidate in Geography and the Environment at the University of Oxford. Mwangi’s research traces the journey of secondhand clothes from UK sorting warehouses to Nairobi’s Gikomba Market. But this is not just about the clothing trade. It is about disposability as a system, about how value is assigned and stripped away from garments, from spaces, from people. His work combines ethnography, mapping, and audio-visual storytelling to trace how secondhand clothes navigate global and local systems, and how those systems mirror the logics that decide which urban spaces are protected and which are left to burn. He lived in Gikomba during his university days, and his research foregrounds the lived realities of the traders and communities who make the market what it is. Gikomba’s history is inseparable from displacement: born in the 1930s-1940s as a settlement for civil servants, it became a refuge for traders repeatedly pushed out of Nairobi’s streets. Today, it anchors the livelihoods of thousands. Yet it has burned down over and over again, through the 1952 colonial Emergency, through independence, into the present. These fires are not accidents. They are governance. They are the state’s answer to spaces it cannot control, markets it refuses to formalise, and communities it would rather not see. Mwangi’s research follows the global secondhand clothing trade and exposes its racialized architecture. High-quality donated clothes are sorted and sent to Japan. Medium-quality items go to Latin America. Africa gets what remains. This is not coincidence. It is racial capitalism: a system that requires inequality, particularly racial inequality, to function. The same logic that grades clothes in UK warehouses also grades urban spaces in Nairobi, deciding which neighborhoods receive infrastructure and protection, and which are left exposed to fire, eviction, and state violence. The conversation confronts the paradox at the centre of the trade: secondhand clothes sustain millions of livelihoods, yet they also make African markets the dumping ground for the Global North’s overproduction. Mwangi does not call for bans. He calls for accountability. Extended producer responsibility would shift the burden back to fast fashion companies, making them responsible for the waste they generate rather than offloading it onto precarious economies. The problem is not individual consumers. It is the system that treats disposal as inevitable and Africa as the place where things, and people, are discarded. Drawing on Southern urbanism, Mwangi reframes how we understand African cities. Gikomba is not chaos. It is not marginal. It is a space produced through survival, strategy, and resistance. Yet it is constantly treated as disposable. His research insists on centering the traders’ knowledge, their networks, their agency. He also reflects on the ethics of his work: how to conduct research that does not extract, that does not feed into policies of erasure, and that represents Gikomba’s reality without reducing it to data or tragedy. 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ How Gikomba’s recurring fires since the 1940s reveal governance through erasure, and why informal markets are treated as spaces the state can destroy with impunity ✅ The racialized structure of the global secondhand clothing trade, where Africa receives the lowest-grade items while higher-quality clothes are sorted to Japan and Latin America ✅ Racial capitalism as the framework that structures both the clothing trade and urban governance, relying on inequality to sustain itself ✅ The grading systems for secondhand clothes and how the same logics of value and disposability are applied to neighborhoods, markets, and lives ✅ Extended producer responsibility as a way to hold fast fashion accountable for waste, rather than making African markets absorb the consequences ✅ Southern urbanism and why informal markets like Gikomba disrupt dominant ideas about planning, infrastructure, and what counts as a legitimate city ✅ The lives, strategies, and agency of Gikomba’s traders, who build systems of value and survival in the face of constant precarity ✅ The ethics of research in informal spaces: how to engage without extracting, and how to ensure the work does not contribute to policies of displacement or harm ✅ Why consumerism is systemic, not individual, and how the lifecycle of clothing reveals deeper structures of inequality and waste Gikomba survives because it has to. Because the people who depend on it have no other choice, and because the state has never offered an alternative. But survival is not the same as security. This episode asks what it would mean to recognize informal markets not as problems to be managed or erased, but as economies that sustain millions, and to build policy, infrastructure, and urban planning around that recognition. 📚Reading Materials and Other Resources: * People as Infrastructure: Intersecting Fragments in Johannesburg by Abdoumaliq Simone * Salaula: The World of Secondhand Clothing and Zambia by Karen Tranberg Hansen (Book on Second-hand clothes in Zambia) * Professor Ruth Wilson Gilmore (The amazing Abolition Geographer, a nice profile of her and her work, https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/17/magazine/prison-abolition-ruth-wilson-gilmore.html) * Whose crime? Arson, class warfare and traders in Nairobi, 1940-2000 by Claire C. Robertson (the brilliant article that documents cases of arson across Nairobi between 1940-2000, capturing how these cases of fires are part of the story of the violent birth of Nairobi) * Janet Chemitei (the lovely Slow Fashion educator Mwangi quoted as we he was speaking of her activism) * Africa Collect Textiles, ACT (the organisation that does Up-cycling and is envisioning and working on what sustainable fashion can look like. They also receive clothes discarded at different points across Nairobi. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 16m
  2. Kenya's Digital Rights: Privacy, Constitution and Politics of Data with Dr Mugambi Laibuta

    09/22/2025

    Kenya's Digital Rights: Privacy, Constitution and Politics of Data with Dr Mugambi Laibuta

    In this episode of Sera na Sauti, we speak with Dr. Mugambi Laibuta, legal scholar and chair of the Data, Privacy and Governance Society of Kenya, whose work has shaped national debates on privacy, data protection, and civil liberties. He traces the long history of privacy in Kenya’s constitutional text and unpacks how it led to the 2019 Data Protection Act, while also examining the tensions between state security, corporate power, and free expression in a digital era. Mugambi reminds us that privacy has been in Kenya’s constitutional DNA since independence. The 1963 constitution barred unconstitutional searches and seizures, protecting the privacy of individuals, homes, and property. Even as the text was amended over decades, this provision endured. Courts often sided with citizens in cases of illegal police searches, insisting on compliance with the Police Standing Orders and Criminal Procedure Code. From the CKRC draft to Bomas to the 2005 draft, privacy was consistently present in constitutional debates, and in 2010 it was firmly enshrined alongside dignity, freedom of expression, and access to information. Yet constitutional principle was not enough. Civil society pushed for a data protection bill as early as 2009, but it stalled. The turning point came with Huduma Namba in 2018 and 2019. Petitions to the High Court argued that a national digital ID could not exist without comprehensive data protection laws. At the same time, Senator Gideon Moi’s Senate bill was sidelined in favor of a Ministry of ICT draft, which Parliament passed. Kenya thus enacted the Data Protection Act in 2019, providing clear principles for how personal data should be collected, stored, and shared, creating rights for data subjects, and establishing the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner to enforce compliance and provide recourse through fines and compensation. The conversation moves through questions of enforcement and accountability. While the Data Commissioner has fined private companies, critics note limited action against government misuse of data. Mugambi highlights recent data breaches, such as leaks of eCitizen records, and emphasizes that the institutions with custody of data such as KRA, immigration, or ministries bear ultimate responsibility. He outlines how citizens can file complaints directly to the Data Commissioner through a simple online portal, with decisions required within 90 days. We also delve into Kenya’s security laws. Since the passage of the Private Security Regulations Act, guards at buildings can legally demand IDs and record them, though the protection of this information remains weak. Surveillance powers for agencies like DCI and NIS are legal but require warrants, safeguards often ignored in practice. Mugambi cites cases like Albert Ojwang’s abduction and recalls concerns over spyware such as Pegasus. In reality, he says, government combines data from telcos, CCTV, social media, and even utility payments, making it nearly impossible for citizens to fully evade surveillance. The real question becomes whether evidence was obtained lawfully, and courts have occasionally thrown out improperly gathered phone data, though exceptions like in the Dusit terror trial show how public interest can override privacy. Mugambi then turns to the privatized public square of social media. Platforms like Facebook, X, and TikTok both enable free expression and facilitate censorship, sometimes at the behest of states. He notes how during Covid-19, dissenting views were removed, raising questions about whether we are pro-speech or not. In Kenya, debates about misinformation risk being weaponized to suppress legitimate political speech. He insists that all speech must be allowed unless it is harmful, such as incitement to violence, genocide, or defamation, because truth ultimately surfaces when ideas are contested openly. This tension played out during the 2024 Finance Bill protests. The #Msalimie campaign, where youth shared politicians’ phone numbers, was arguably legal for public officials but not for their relatives, who retain privacy rights. Around the same time, the Communications Authority attempted to halt live protest broadcasts, a directive Mugambi calls unconstitutional and in defiance of court rulings that broadcasting oversight lies with the Media Council of Kenya. Petitions by Katiba Institute and the Law Society restored live coverage, underscoring the role of courts in defending media freedom. The episode also explores whistleblowing, where Kenya lacks strong laws beyond the Witness Protection Act and journalists’ rights to protect sources. Past cases, like the Goldenberg scandal, show how whistleblowers often suffer personally, even to the point of exile or poverty. On innovation, Mugambi stresses that data protection is not a barrier but a safeguard. Companies must secure informed consent, especially in sensitive sectors like health. The controversy over Worldcoin illustrates how transparency, not prohibition, should guide innovation. Finally, he reflects on the broader landscape. The Data Commissioner has opened regional offices and engaged in public education, but resources remain thin and fines may not be deterrent enough. Citizens, meanwhile, can take practical steps such as strong passwords, two-factor authentication, careful posting habits, and awareness of what personal information they expose online. 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ Huduma Namba and court petitions as the catalyst for the 2019 Data Protection Act✅ Principles of the Act: handling of personal data, rights for data subjects, and recourse through the Data Commissioner✅ Persistent gaps in holding government accountable for data misuse, despite action against private firms✅ Security laws and surveillance, what is legal on paper versus what happens in practice✅ The reach of telcos, CCTV, social media, and utility data in building an almost inescapable surveillance net✅ Social media as a privatized public square, and the risks of censorship justified as fighting “misinformation”✅ Protest, accountability, and privacy: from #Msalimie campaigns to unconstitutional broadcast bans✅ Weak whistleblower protections and reliance on journalists to shield sources✅ Innovation and data protection: why transparency and informed consent matter more than speed or scale This is a conversation about how privacy, dignity, and free expression survive, or erode, in a digital Kenya. It is about the gap between constitutional text and lived reality, the risks of drifting into a surveillance state, and the possibility of building a culture where rights are not only written down but actively defended. 📚Reading Materials: * Dr Mugambi Laibuta's Website * State surveillance: Kenyans have a right to privacy – does the government respect it? * Data Privacy and Governance Society This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 18m
  3. Kenya’s Hollow Politics: Its Origins, What We’ve Lost, Who Bears the Risk with Mumbi Kanyogo

    08/05/2025

    Kenya’s Hollow Politics: Its Origins, What We’ve Lost, Who Bears the Risk with Mumbi Kanyogo

    What if the reason nothing seems to change, even when we protest, is because the very language we use has already narrowed what we’re allowed to imagine? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, we speak with Kenyan feminist writer and scholar Mumbi Kanyogo about the hollowing out of Kenyan politics and how the vocabulary of “good governance,” accountability, and reform has quietly replaced more radical demands for justice, solidarity, and economic transformation. Mumbi traces the architecture of depoliticisation: from the colonial banning of political parties in 1953, to Sessional Paper No. 10, to the NGO-isation of resistance following structural adjustment. Across each of these moments, she argues, there was a steady erosion of ideology and its replacement with frameworks of reform, accountability, and technical improvement. This shift has not only narrowed what movements demand but often made even radical organising sound like a policy memo. The conversation moves through Kenya’s post-independence history, the IMF and World Bank’s role in shaping African governance discourse, and how donor-funded civil society helped institutionalise managerial thinking within activist spaces. We speak about how protest demands are often pre-interpreted through frameworks that make systemic injustice sound like an implementation failure. Mumbi also reflects on the June 2024 protests, how risk was distributed unevenly across class lines, with low-income youth bearing the brunt of police violence while more privileged protesters could exit the moment with little consequence. She speaks to the limits of symbolic care, the temptation to romanticise protest, and the urgent need to pair solidarity with strategy. Drawing from political theorist Joy James, she reflects on how movements often rely on low-income earners to carry out unending acts of care, protection, and logistical support, what James refers to as the captive maternal function. Without collective strategy, even this politicised care can become a substitute for confronting power, rather than a tool to disrupt it. 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ How the language of “good governance” replaced radical political demands, and how it shapes what movements today are allowed to ask for✅ The deliberate depoliticisation of Kenyan public life, from colonial bans to donor influence, and how ideology was systematically erased✅ Structural adjustment, blame-shifting, and how global institutions avoided responsibility by turning failure into an issue of local leadership✅ The unequal risks of protest, how police repression targets the precarious, and what true solidarity might look like in that context✅ The NGO-isation of resistance, and what was lost when mass movements gave way to technocratic solutions✅ The politicisation of care, and how acts of mutual aid, without strategy, can end up reinforcing the very systems they aim to resist✅ Joy James’ concept of the captive maternal, and how movements rely on low-income earners to absorb risk and sustain struggle through care, without addressing the systems that exploit them✅ The paradox of strategy, why movements fear it, how that fear can lead to co-optation, and why strategic thinking must return to the centre of resistance This is not just a conversation about protest. It is about the frameworks we’ve inherited and how they shape what we fight for, how we show up, and what becomes thinkable. It is about reclaiming language, reintroducing ideology, and refusing to settle for better management of broken systems. It is about what comes after the slogans and whether we are ready to ask for, and risk, something more. 📚Reading Materials: * How “good governance” came to dominate our discourses and demands by Mumbi Kanyogo * Without strategy, solidarity is an illusion by Mumbi Kanyogo * A note on time – there is no tomorrow, no 2027, only today by Mumbi Kanyogo * The Captive Maternal: Anti-Fascists in Search of the Beloved by Joy James This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 20m
  4. Three Days with Ngugi wa Thiongo: Literary Memory and the Craft of Writing with Carey Baraka

    07/19/2025

    Three Days with Ngugi wa Thiongo: Literary Memory and the Craft of Writing with Carey Baraka

    Note: this episode was recorded before the passing of Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o. What happens when you spend three days living with one of the most recognisable names in African literature, and the story you tell after doesn’t fit the public script? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, we sit down with Kenyan writer Carey Baraka to talk about writing, literary memory, and the questions that followed his profile of Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o for The Guardian. We speak about what Carey expected going in, and what actually unfolded over the three days he spent at Ngũgĩ’s home in California. From conversations about class politics in Ngũgĩ’s children’s books to the missing Kampala section that never made it into the final draft, the experience raised questions that stretched beyond the piece itself. The conversation moves into Carey’s own relationship with writing; the slow, deliberate process of shaping a piece, the challenge of finding the right voice, and the quiet satisfaction when it finally comes together. We talk about his obsession with forgotten African writers, the literary memory of 1960s Kampala, and his frustration with how African literature often gets framed, either through the lens of global prizes or reduced to political shorthand. Carey also reflects on the place of gossip and quiet observation in writing, the small details that shape a story, and the lines writers constantly navigate between storytelling and intrusion. And he speaks about writing as literary preoccupation, the influence of other writers, the contradictions that sit alongside the work, and the simple, personal conviction that “I am a writer before anything else, and any sort of death that ended with me remembered as a brave protester rather than a writer would be a betrayal to myself.” 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ Profiling Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, how three days in California led to a piece that sparked backlash, and what it revealed about public expectations and private lives✅ The literary memory of 1960s Kampala, and how that moment shaped a generation of East African writers, lingering quietly in Carey’s own work✅ Forgotten African writers, the personal work of tracking down names that history left behind, and what it says about how African literature is remembered✅ The Nobel Prize and literary politics, what global recognition means for African writers, and the tension between aesthetics, politics, and expectation✅ Carey’s writing process, how a piece can take months to settle, what gets cut in editing, and the search for the right tone across different publications✅ The place of gossip in writing, how quiet details, overheard moments, and ambiguity shape good storytelling, and where writers draw the line between intimacy and intrusion✅ Writing as literary preoccupation, grounded in a deep commitment to the craft, and driven by the freedom to explore ideas beyond national duty or political expectation✅ The economics of writing, from side gigs to disappearing magazines, and what it takes to keep going in an industry that rarely pays This is not just a conversation about Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o. It is about the quieter, messier questions behind writing itself: who gets remembered, what gets published, and how stories are shaped in the hands of editors, institutions, and time. It is about the writers who came before, the ones we forget, and the ones still trying to make it work, balancing rent, rewrites, and a deep love for the craft. 📚Reading Materials: * Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o: three days with a giant of African literature by Carey Baraka * Reading The Most Secret Memory of Men in Venice by Carey Baraka * The Many Faces of Binyavanga Wainaina by Carey Baraka * Remembering Kampala by Carey Baraka * ‘Gossip Is at the Heart of Any Good Story’ by Carey Baraka * Inside the Kenyan cult that starved itself to death * Nairobi to New York and back: the loneliness of the internationally educated elite by Carey Baraka * Carey Baraka’s Website This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 47m
  5. A Republic in Debt: Kenya's Constitution and Economic Governance with Kwame Owino

    07/01/2025

    A Republic in Debt: Kenya's Constitution and Economic Governance with Kwame Owino

    How did Kenya's debt spiral so far out of control that 60% of government revenue now goes to debt service, and how did the constitutional safeguards designed to prevent exactly this get steadily bypassed? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, Cheptum Toroitich sits down with economist and policy analyst Kwame Owino to unpack how Kenya arrived at this crisis — and whether the country can still pull back from the brink. The 2010 Constitution set out a clear vision for how public money should be managed: transparent borrowing, strict oversight, and citizen participation. But over the years, those protections have been steadily set aside. Parliament, entrusted with guarding the public purse, has instead enabled reckless borrowing, approving budgets, endorsing loans, and avoiding the hard conversations. The consequences are now impossible to ignore: households crushed by the cost of living, strained public services in healthcare and education, and protests that signal Kenyans have reached the breaking point of how much they can be taxed. The harder question is whether there is still a credible way out. Kwame trace how we got here, the uncomfortable choices Kenya now faces, and why, despite political resistance, restructuring may be the only viable option left. 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ How Kenya’s debt crisis was built through political choices, weak oversight, and ignored constitutional safeguards✅ The promises of the 2010 Constitution on transparency, accountability, and public participation, and how they have been steadily undermined✅ Parliament’s failure to carry out its oversight role, and what that has meant for public finance✅ The human cost of the crisis, from strained public services to a rising cost of living✅ Why the protests signal more than frustration. They mark a tipping point on taxation, governance, and public trust✅ The uncomfortable debate on debt restructuring, and why avoiding it may leave Kenya with no way out The crisis may feel inevitable now, but as Kwame argues, it is still the result of choices, and it can be undone by choices too. Whether the country charts a way out depends on how quickly leaders, institutions, and citizens confront the reality of where we stand, and whether there is the political courage to take the difficult, but necessary, way forward. 📚Reading Materials: * If You Keep Doing … A new macroeconomic strategy for Kenya, now by Kwame Owino, Maureen Barasa, and Peter Doyle * Two Immediate Monetary-Framework Imperatives for Mr. Mbadi by Kwame Owino, Maureen Barasa, Peter Doyle * Tracing the Economics of White Elephants Using Kenya’s SGR and Nairobi Expressway by Kwame Owino * Gen Z Collective Action on Taxation and Economic Policy by Leo Kipkogei Kemboi * Is Kenya’s Tax System Efficient, Optimal, and Equitable? by Leo Kipkogei Kemboi * The Case for More Effective Fiscal Rules in Kenya by Maureen Barasa This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 3m
  6. Who Killed Tom Mboya? Resistance, Legacy, and Theatre with Ngartia Muruthi

    04/24/2025

    Who Killed Tom Mboya? Resistance, Legacy, and Theatre with Ngartia Muruthi

    🗣️ What do we really know about Tom Mboya—and why does his assassination still remain unanswered? In this episode, we sit down with Ngartia—writer, performer, and co-founder of Too Early For Birds—to revisit the life, assassination, and evolving legacy of Tom Mboya through the lens of theatre. Mboya, the play first staged in 2019 and revived in 2024, isn’t just a tribute. It’s an excavation. We discuss what the team uncovered about Mboya’s political life, his assassination, and the forces around him—details that rarely make it into textbooks or public memory. What happens when theatre dares to tell a version of history that challenges the official narrative? Ngartia walks us through the creative risks of staging Mboya’s story, the rigorous research behind it, and how current political unrest—from police brutality to tax protests—shaped the tone of the 2024 restaging. We also trace the founding of Too Early For Birds, its bold voice in Kenyan storytelling, and why memory—especially of figures like Wangari Maathai, the Nyayo House Survivors, and Zarina Patel—remains central to their work. 🎭 And finally, we turn to art as activism. From the energy of maandamano (protests) to the government’s censorship of Echoes of War, a school play by Butere Girls, we reflect on theatre’s enduring role as a site of resistance and public dialogue. When the streets speak, the stage often reflects—and sometimes, it's silenced. 🧑🏽‍🏫 Echoes of the ClassroomPlus, in our new segment Echoes of the Classroom, we ask Ngartia a series of quick-fire questions about his high school experience—bringing in moments of high school horrors, unforgettable memories, and the early sparks of interest in theatre. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 29m
  7. The Missing Conscript: Untold African Stories from World War 1 with Lutivini Majanja

    04/17/2025

    The Missing Conscript: Untold African Stories from World War 1 with Lutivini Majanja

    What does it mean to trace a family line through silence, absence, and war? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, we sit down with writer Lutivini Majanja to explore the untold stories of African conscripts in World War I—through the personal and haunting story of her great-grandfather, Odanga. Drawing from her evocative essay Odanga Is Still Fighting, Lutivini shares with us the forgotten world of the Carrier Corps—over 90,000 men conscripted from western Kenya to support Britain’s war effort. Many never returned. Many were never named. This is not a history we’re taught in school. It lives instead in fragments: in family memory, in children’s rhymes, in funeral rites, and in the words not spoken. We talk about the challenges of reconstructing erased histories—and how storytelling can become a practice of memory and history, making space for the lives history tried to forget. Lutivini takes us beyond the familiar imagery of European trenches to center East African landscapes and legacies. She shares how her great-grandfather Odanga wasn’t selected for conscription but insisted on going, an act that reveals the complex ways Africans responded to colonial recruitment. Meanwhile, her other great-grandfather fled and hid until the war ended—two very different responses to the same call, within her family. 📌 Key themes from the conversation:✅ The forgotten African soldiers of WWI and the systematic erasure of their contributions✅ Two great-grandfathers: one who escaped conscription, and one who insisted on going when his younger brother was chosen✅ The politics of archives: Lutivini’s search for Odanga and the barriers to accessing African war histories✅ A creative nonfiction approach that blends oral histories, family interviews, and archival research✅ How funeral recitations, naming practices, and oral traditions preserve what colonial archives overlook✅ How war, silence, and colonial violence echo across generations This is a conversation about war and memory, grief and recovery—and what it means to search for someone history tried to forget. 📚 Reading Materials: * Odanga is Still Fighting * Kariakor: The Carrier Corps by Goeffrey Hodges This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 24m
  8. Northern Kenya: Identity, Governance and Belonging with Dalle Abraham

    03/19/2025

    Northern Kenya: Identity, Governance and Belonging with Dalle Abraham

    What happens when centuries-old governance systems and a long-standing economic way of life like pastoralism meet a modern state still in formation? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, we sit down with Dalle Abraham, a Kenyan writer documenting the complex realities of Northern Kenya, to explore how pastoralism, traditional governance, and national borders shape identity and governance. Drawing from his piece Bordering on Borana, Dalle unpacks the artificiality of colonial borders, the resilience of traditional governance systems, and how literature challenges dominant narratives about pastoralist communities. 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ Pastoralism as an adaptive, sustainable economic system that continues to thrive despite state-imposed constraints. ✅ Borderlands as spaces shaped by transnational networks, informal economies, and overlapping governance structures, rather than a singular source of power. ✅ Northern Kenya’s traditional leadership structures, which have governed communities for centuries, while the modern state struggles to impose its systems. ✅ Colonial legacies and post-independence policies that continue to shape governance and identity in the region. ✅ Writers from Northern Kenya reclaiming narratives, challenging media portrayals of pastoralist communities, and documenting stories often erased from mainstream discourse. Northern Kenya’s story is not just about one region—it’s a lens into how borders, governance, and identity interact in Africa’s peripheries. This is a conversation for anyone interested in history, identity, governance, and the power of storytelling. 📚 Links to Reading Materials: * Bordering on Borana * A Story of Marsabit: A Study of Home * Another Country: The Cultural and Religious Struggle between Northern and Southern Kenya This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 37m
  9. Kampala's Violent Birth: History and Urbanization with A.K. Kaiza

    02/20/2025

    Kampala's Violent Birth: History and Urbanization with A.K. Kaiza

    What do the origins of a city tell us about power, resistance, and identity? In this episode of Sera na Sauti, we sit down with A.K. Kaiza, a renowned Ugandan writer and journalist, to unpack the hidden histories of Kampala—its colonial violence, its evolution, and the legacies that still shape it today. Drawing from his powerful essay The Violent Birth of Kampala in Debunk Quarterly, Kaiza takes us through the city’s contested past, the role of storytelling in reclaiming buried histories, and how urban spaces become battlegrounds for power and resistance. 📌 Key themes from the conversation: ✅ The brutal origins of Kampala and how colonial legacies persist in urban design ✅ How history is erased, rewritten, and reclaimed through storytelling ✅ The role of writers in confronting uncomfortable truths and challenging dominant narratives ✅ The intersection of art, memory, and activism in shaping African cities Kampala’s history is not just about one city—it’s a mirror for how African urban spaces carry the weight of the past into the present. This is a conversation for anyone interested in history, politics, literature, and the ongoing struggle for identity in African spaces. 📚Reading Material Link: https://debunk.media/quarterly/the-violent-birth-of-kampala/ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit seranasauti.substack.com

    1h 41m

About

Sera na Sauti is about making sense of the world—through books, dialogue, and the stories that define us. seranasauti.substack.com