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Our hotspots

Kenya

We work with frontline organisations, child domestic workers, their allies and the government to increase the visibility of exploitative child domestic work and support advocacy that creates a protective and inclusive environment.

Key information

Hotspot launch
December 2022
Total investment
$1,086,662
Lives impacted
98
Focus areas
  • Child domestic work
  • Forced labour

What we do

Child domestic work (CDW) is estimated to be the second largest contributor to child labour in Kenya after agriculture, with its prevalence fueled by the invisible nature of children subjected to exploitative work in private settings. Children working in the domestic service are often subject to long hours and physical and sexual abuse. CDW remains ‘invisible’ to the government due to limited access to the private settings in which children work, coupled with lack of clarity around what constitutes harmful CDW within Kenyan legal and policy frameworks.

The Kenya hotspot program is called NIA, short for “Not Invisible Anymore”. It also translates to “purpose” or “intention” in Swahili. The program–works in partnership with frontline organisations to create an empowered collective of child domestic workers, their allies, civic organisations and government institutions to protect children in domestic work from abuse and exploitation.

The NIA program prioritises working with the most vulnerable children with lived experience of child domestic work and those at risk of engaging in child domestic work. This includes children who are orphaned, child mothers, adolescents in educational transition, and children in female-headed households.

Our impact

98 Lives impacted

68 Individuals accessing social and legal service

11 At-risk children in school

2 Legal cases assisted

 

Our team

Ginny Baumann

Senior Program Manager

Hannah Elliot

Program Manager

Sophie Hicks

Program Manager

Maureen Karanja

Program Manager, Kenya

Ruth Kimani

Senior Program Manager, East Africa

Job N. Manani

Program Advisor, Kenya

Hidden in plain sight

The Freedom Fund partnered with the African Institute of Children Studies to undertake a formative research study of child labour–child domestic work in Kenya. The study aims to inform the Freedom Fund’s current and future programming in Kenya, as well to increase visibility of the CDWs, in order to enrich understanding of their different realities and to suggest ways of further strengthening policy and programming that protects vulnerable CDWs.

Our approach

Child-centred advocacy

Strengthen a child-centric approach and challenge perceptions of children as passive victims of child labour, abuse and violence. Collectivise children in domestic work, child survivors and at-risk children to recognise their own knowledge and power, and lead in advocacy to address child domestic exploitation.

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Child and survivor services

Expand services for current and former CDW and ensure support is more comprehensive and better coordinated, including that provided by government and law enforcement.

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Economic resilience

Increase economic opportunities and resilience for at-risk communities and households so that adults are less likely to let their children go into domestic work.

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Policy and implementation

Support the strengthening, coordinating and implementation of child protection policies and structures. Establish tools for data collection and analysis.

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