Kenya's corruption landscape: Difference between revisions
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* '''Institutional weakness''': Bodies that are meant to fight against corruptions are highly politically influenced. | * '''Institutional weakness''': Bodies that are meant to fight against corruptions are highly politically influenced. | ||
* '''Normalization''': Corruption is often accepted as the "cost of doing business" or accessing services. | * '''Normalization''': Corruption is often accepted as the "cost of doing business" or accessing services. | ||
* ''' | * '''Top-down driven''': Corruption often originates from the highest levels of a country's leadership. | ||
== Key corruption cases == | == Key corruption cases == |
Revision as of 10:07, 21 July 2025
π’ Kenya's corruption landscape
Kenyaβs corruption landscape is deeply entrenched and spans multiple sectors, from government and law enforcement to health, education, infrastructure, and judiciary.
π Key Characteristics
- Systemic and high-level: Corruption goes beyond petty bribery and includes grand theft, public resource looting, and procurement fraud.
- Institutional weakness: Bodies that are meant to fight against corruptions are highly politically influenced.
- Normalization: Corruption is often accepted as the "cost of doing business" or accessing services.
- Top-down driven: Corruption often originates from the highest levels of a country's leadership.
Key corruption cases
β οΈ More Information Required
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