A critique of the efficacy of the right to shelter for street children in Kenya

L. Ndimurwimo, E. N. Wanjala, Asande Felix Makori
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Abstract

The right to housing or shelter is a fundamental right that has been given recognition at national, regional, and international levels. In Kenya, everyone's right to access adequate housing and basic shelter is enshrined in the Constitution of Kenya, 2010 and various international and regional human instruments, but there is no specific legislation or policy that caters to the right of street families and children to access housing or shelter. The gap that exists in law and policy deepens the vulnerability of street families and children, who are being left behind and not included in governmental socioeconomic programmes and interventions targeting vulnerable and marginalised persons. For example, street children are often excluded from planning, budgeting, and national decisions relating to socio-economic rights that include shelter. This article considers how Kenya's street children's right to shelter may be protected. Accordingly, it recommends measures that could be taken to protect their right to shelter, as well as other socio-economic rights, and thereby create a pathway to realising the values of equality and human dignity enshrined in the Constitution.
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对肯尼亚街头儿童庇护权效力的评论
住房权或住所权是一项基本权利,已在国家、区域和国际各级得到承认。在肯尼亚,人人享有获得适足住房和基本住所的权利已载入 2010 年《肯尼亚宪法》以及各种国际和区域人类文书,但没有专门的立法或政策照顾到街头家庭和儿童获得住房或住所的权利。法律和政策中存在的空白加深了街头家庭和儿童的脆弱性,他们被抛在后面,没有被纳入政府针对弱势和边缘化人群的社会经济计划和干预措施中。例如,街头儿童往往被排除在与社会经济权利(包括住房)相关的规划、预算和国家决策之外。本文探讨了如何保护肯尼亚街头儿童的住房权。因此,本文建议采取一些措施来保护他们的住房权以及其他社会经济权利,从而为实现《宪法》所载的平等和人类尊严的价值观创造条件。
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