By KLRB Editorial on Monday, 24 November 2025
Category: Kabarak Law Review Blog

Femicide symposium editorial

Femicide is a gendered form of violence that was first defined as a feminist concept by Jill Radford and Diana Russel.[1] The concept, was intended to expose the misogynistic and structural roots of the killing of women – because they are women.[2] However, over time, its meaning and political significance has become increasingly blurred. While debates continue over its precise definition, the more pressing concern is the persistent loss of women's lives within cultural environments shaped by harmful norms, practices, and power dynamics.[3] Understanding femicide requires a multidimensional lens. A lens that considers ecological, cultural, and institutional factors, including the failures of justice systems, inadequate gender-sensitive training, and weak political commitment.[4] In Kenya, the absence of explicit criminalisation heightens the urgency of framing femicide clearly and responding to it decisively, as the issue carries profound implications for social wellbeing, accountability, and the future of gender justice.

The Kabarak Law Review purposed to address this pressing concern through a symposium on criminalising femicide in Kenya. The emotional weight of the subject matter made the task of reviewing and editing the many submitted manuscripts quite challenging and highly enriching. I sincerely appreciate all the authors who took the time to contribute to this symposium; indeed, their efforts are part and parcel of this larger crusade for justice. To that end, I am also deeply grateful to James Mulei for doing a good revise edit of the final text and the editorial team of the Kabarak Law Review – whose hard work and long hours brought this project into being.

The symposium consists of five pieces and a poem all addressing the topic. Megan Tess and Maisy Mueni's, Incorporating gender as the fourth element of a crime, begins this symposium. They argue that Kenya must legally recognise femicide as a distinct crime by adding gender-based motivation as a core element, learning from Mexico's codification and South Africa's advocacy to ensure proper investigation and state accountability.

Joy Bii's, [1] [2] Radford and Russell (eds), Femicide: The politics of woman killing, 3.

[3] [4] Christiana Kouta, Santiago Boira, Anita Nudelman and Aisha K Gill, 'Understanding and preventing femicide using a cultural and ecological approach', 55. 

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