Analysis of the role of the County Governments in Implementation of the Nagoya Protocol on access and benefit sharing: a case study of Baringo County in Kenya
View/ Open
Date
2020Author
Githaiga, Cicilia, W
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) (1992)(SCBD, 1992b), was the first international
instrument on conservation of biological diversity to be adopted. Subsequently, the Nagoya Protocol
(2011) on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from
their Utilization to the Convention on Biological Diversity (the Protocol) was adopted and came
into force in October, 2014. The Protocol sought to govern access to genetic resources and sharing
of benefits arising from their utilization and the traditional knowledge associated with them, a
concept commonly known as ABS, and to contribute to the CBD. The critical role of counties in the
management of natural resources since their introduction under the Constitution of Kenya, 2010
(CoK, 2010) is acknowledged but they have not been embedded in the ABS regime as part of the
multi-level governance regime in the country. Their involvement in the management of genetic
resources within the framework of the Nagoya Protocol is supported by Section 50-53 of the
Environmental Management Co-ordination Act, 1999 (EMCA) including Section 147A which
mandates counties to make relevant legislation. Further, the Environmental Management and Coordination
(Conservation of Biological Diversity and Resources, Access to Genetic Resources and
Benefit Sharing) Regulations, 2006 which provide for ABS did not have counties in contemplation
since they were prepared before the CoK, 2010 came into force. Counties have consequently been
inadequately involved in the ABS regime and the objectives of devolution in implementation of the
Protocol have not been realized. The objectives of this research therefore were to analyze the role
of county governments in implementation of the Protocol in Kenya with the specific objectives
seeking to: establish their current role, investigate their relationship with the national government,
find out what policy, legal and institutional gaps exist and to make policy recommendations for
more effective implementation of the Protocol by County Governments. The qualitative research
design was used to collect data between September 2019 and January 2020. Focus group discussions
and key informant interviews were utilized. Baringo County was the ideal study site because it had
experience with ABS. Results show that the role of counties exists within the current law and policy
frameworks, it has been performed to some extent but that there are gaps due to among other reasons,
lack of a clear unifying law and policy at both the national and county levels, failure to devolve
ABS and to involve counties. It was found that counties are required among other functions to: have
an integrated unifying ABS policy and law at national and county levels that include key elements
for implementation of the Protocol; mainstream county roles within existing policy legal and
institutional mechanisms across departments and sectors; document and value their resources; have
an ABS desk office and adopt holistic systems thinking approach in implementation of the Protocol.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: