Research master thesis | African Studies (research) (MA)
open access
This research aims to centre the perspectives and experiences of the host community of Nanyuki, Kenya, in the discussion of the impact of the British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) on the social...Show moreThis research aims to centre the perspectives and experiences of the host community of Nanyuki, Kenya, in the discussion of the impact of the British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) on the social relations of this ‘base’ town. Employing the Aberystwyth School theoretical foundation, this thesis aims to prioritise often overlooked voices and explore the intersections of identity, community relations, and critical security in the civil-military field. Through conducting an extended observation method of various communities and quotidian life in Nanyuki, this method aims to highlight the social tensions that have emerged in the community hosting the British Army in Kenya. Coupled with colonial racial-capitalist tensions, this thesis reveals that beyond the focus on increasing geopolitical security and military capacity, the presence of the military base in Nanyuki furthers insecurity in the host community’s relations. This research argues that the British Army’s presence in Nanyuki emphasises existing class, racial and urban-rural divisions in the social relations of Nanyuki. This thesis will argue that local communities feel that their actions and abilities are constrained due to the sizeable presence and economic importance of BATUK, the illusiveness of personal connections with the soldiers, and the simultaneous feelings of not being able to change the conduct BATUK nor being listened to by the base, makes the local communities feel insecure. This insecurity of the base creates divisions in the urban community as people conform to existing racial and class divisions due to the financial weight of the base over the town of Nanyuki. In the rural area, a different division emerges. Here, the rural community feels abandoned and separate from the town due to the perspective that they experience the detrimental impacts of BATUK yet none of the benefits that they perceive the urban community to receive. Without understanding the insecurity that these bases cause in the local community, these military bases may create security for the national, regional, and international at the expense of the local.Show less