Blockchain technology has emerged as one of the most discussed potential solutions to some of Kenya's most persistent institutional and economic challenges, from fraudulent land transactions and count...
Kenya's wetlands are among the country's most valuable natural assets, providing water, food, livelihoods, and tourism revenue to millions of people while supporting biodiversity of global significanc...
Kenya's cement industry is a foundational sector that literally provides the building blocks for the country's infrastructure development and urban transformation. From the limestone quarries of the c...
The Maasai community embodies the tensions and possibilities of Kenya's development journey, standing at the intersection of ancient pastoral traditions and modern economic pressures, of spectacular w...
Drought and famine have shaped Kenya's history, politics, and development trajectory in ways that are often underappreciated by those unfamiliar with the harsh realities of life in the country's arid ...
Property transactions in Kenya attract multiple taxes including stamp duty at two to four percent paid by buyers, capital gains tax at 15 percent on profits paid by sellers, monthly rental income tax ...
Buying land in Kenya is one of the most important and risky financial transactions a person can make, with land fraud costing victims billions of shillings annually through fake title deeds, double se...
Kenya's cement and steel industries form the backbone of East Africa's construction boom, with cement production capacity exceeding ten million tonnes annually and steel manufacturers like Devki Group...
The Constitution of Kenya 2010, one of Africa's most progressive, fundamentally restructured governance around principles of devolution, human rights, transparency, and accountability. Promulgated aft...
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