Socio-Cultural and Socio-Economic Challenges Faced by Children Born Outside Marriage in Tana River County

Authors

  • Nandongwa Ivy Laura Kenyatta University
  • Dr. Daniel Muia Kenyatta University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53819/81018102t5388

Abstract

Children born outside marriage face substantial challenges compared to counterparts born within marital unions, with incidents rising globally. This study examined socio-cultural and socio-economic challenges experienced by children born outside marriage in Tana River County, Kenya. The study objective was to establish the socio-cultural and socio-economic challenges faced by children born outside marriage in Tana River County. A descriptive survey design using mixed methods was adopted, with five villages randomly sampled and 690 households included in the cross-sectional survey. Key informant interviews (n=3) with community elders, in-depth interviews (n=5) with mothers, and two focus group discussions involving 8 male and 8 female community members were conducted. Data were analyzed using MS Excel for quantitative data and thematic framework methods for qualitative data. Key findings revealed severe educational exclusion, with 87% of children not attending school due to unaffordable fees, bullying, and maternal poverty, while enrolled children attended irregularly and demonstrated predominantly poor academic performance. Systematic discrimination affected 83% of children through physical punishment, verbal abuse referencing birth status, and exclusion from opportunities including bursaries and school activities. Economic disadvantage was pervasive, with only 36.8% of mothers able to support school fees, 60% of children denied land inheritance rights, and majority of mothers either unemployed or in casual employment. Maternal vulnerability was evident, with 40.3% of women becoming pregnant during adolescence, 22.8% unemployed, and 41.2% conceiving through transactional sex while 24% experienced rape or incest. The study concludes that children born outside marriage face challenges stemming from cultural stigma perceiving them as illegitimate, patriarchal inheritance systems excluding children without recognized paternal lineage, maternal economic vulnerability, and weak enforcement of legal protections. These disadvantages perpetuate intergenerational poverty, compromise health and education, cause psychological trauma, and threaten future societal development if unaddressed. The study recommends that the Directorate of Children Services should enhance comprehensive sexuality education to empower girls and women in sexual health choices, the Ministry of Education and State Department of Social Protection should ensure educational access through 100% transition policy with fee waivers and anti-discrimination measures, and county stakeholders should implement awareness campaigns about stigma's adverse effects while expanding bursary programs targeting children born outside marriage.

Keywords: Socio-Cultural, Socio-Economic Challenges, Children, Outside Marriage, Tana River County

 

Author Biographies

Nandongwa Ivy Laura , Kenyatta University

Postgraduate student, Community Development, Kenyatta University

Dr. Daniel Muia, Kenyatta University

Lecturer, Department of Sociology, Kenyatta University

References

Amato, P. R. and R. A. Maynard (2007). Decreasing nonmarital births and strengthening marriage to reduce poverty. The Future of Children: 117-141.

Bbaale, E. and P. Mpuga (2011). Female education, contraceptive use, and fertility: evidence from Uganda. Consilience (6): 20-47.

Calvès, A.-E. (1999). Marginalization of African single mothers in the marriage market: Evidence from Cameroon. Population Studies 53(3): 291-301.

Carlson, M. J. (2006). Family structure, father involvement, and adolescent behavioral outcomes. Journal of marriage and family 68(1): 137-154.

Chamie, J. (2017). Out-of-wedlock births rise worldwide. YaleGlobal Online [Internet].

Emina, J. B. (2009). Child Malnutrition in Cameroon: Does out-of-wedlock childbearing matter.

Engo, F. T., R. B. Castro and A. E. San Jose (2022). Making Their Voices Heard: The Experiences of Children Born Outside of Marriage.

Gage, A. J. (1998). Premarital childbearing, unwanted fertility and maternity care in Kenya and Namibia. Population studies 52(1): 21-34.

Gebreselassie, H., M. F. Gallo, A. Monyo and B. R. Johnson (2005). The magnitude of abortion complications in Kenya. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology 112(9): 1229-1235.

Goodman, A., E. Greaves and J. Payne (2010). Cohabitation, marriage and child outcomes.

Guilbert, N. and K. Marazyan (2013). Being Born Out-of-wedlock Does it affect a Child’s Survival Chance? An Empirical Investigation for Senegal.

Hanna, A. K. (1940). Changing Care of Children Born Out of Wedlock. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 212(1): 159-166.

Jamalludin, N. A. Y. B., R. A. M. Mokhtar and M. Sulaiman (2022). The Importance of Understanding Islamic Teaching in Curbing the Stigma of Out of Wedlock Children When Making Illegitimate Pregnancy Resolution in Malay Muslim Community in Malaysia.

Jemutai, J., K. Muraya, P. C. Chi and S. Mulupi (2021). A situation analysis of access to refugee health services in Kenya: Gaps and recommendations-A literature review. Centre for Health Economics, University of York Working Papers(178cherp).

Johnson-Hanks, J. (2005). Sexual stigma and infant mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. IUSSP meeting, Tours.

Johnston, J. (2018) Kids Need a Mom and a Dad – That’s What the Research Shows. Daily Citizen.

Kabiru, C. W., B. A. Ushie, M. M. Mutua and C. O. Izugbara (2016). Previous induced abortion among young women seeking abortion-related care in Kenya: a cross-sectional analysis. BMC pregnancy and childbirth 16(1): 1-10.

Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (2019). 2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Kenya National Bureau of Statistics

Lenroot, K. F. (1921). Social Responsibility for the Protection of Children Handicapped by Illegitimate Birth. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 98(1): 120-128.

Levin, K. A. (2006). Study design III: Cross-sectional studies. Evidence-based dentistry 7(1): 24-25.

Mavropoulos, G. and T. Panagiotidis (2022). The role of relative income in the share of children born out-of-wedlock in the USA. Empirical Economics: 1-16.

McCrary, J. and H. Royer (2011). The effect of female education on fertility and infant health: evidence from school entry policies using exact date of birth. American economic review 101(1): 158-195.

Merton, R. K. (1996). On social structure and science, University of Chicago Press.

Msuya, N. (2020). Child marriage: An obstacle to socio-economic development in sub-Saharan Africa. Journal for juridical science 45(2): 43-73.

Nation Team (2021). Kenya: Coast Experiences Steep Rise in Teen Pregnancies. Daily Nation.

Ntoimo, L. F. and C. O. Odimegwu (2014). Health effects of single motherhood on children in sub-Saharan Africa: a cross-sectional study. BMC public health 14(1): 1-13.

Obladen, M. (2022). Dishonoured: The Fate of Infants Born out of Wedlock. Neonatology 119(5): 652-659.

Ogaya, C. (2021). Intergenerational Exploitation of Filipino Women and Their Japanese Filipino Children:Born out of place Babies as New Cheap Labor in Japan. Critical Sociology 47(1): 59-71.

Pauli, J. (2012). Creating illegitimacy: Negotiating relations and reproduction within christian contexts in Northwest Namibia. Journal of Religion in Africa 42(4): 408-432.

Pew Research Centre (2016) ON VIEWS OF RACE AND INEQUALITY, BLACKS AND WHITES ARE WORLDS APART.

Pierson-Balik, D. A. (2003). Race, class, and gender in punitive welfare reform: Social eugenics and welfare policy. Race, gender & class: 11-30.

Possa-Mogoera, R. (2023). Naming children born out of wedlock among the Basotho in Lesotho and South Africa: A critical discourse analysis. Nomina Africana: Journal of African Onomastics 37(1): 73-85.

Ramesh, R. (2012). Married couple households in minority for first time, 2011 census shows. The Guardian

Rane, T. R. and B. A. McBride (2000). Identity theory as a guide to understanding fathers' involvement with their children. Journal of family issues 21(3): 347-366.

Republic of Kenya (2010). The Constitution of Kenya.

Republic of Kenya (2022). The Children's Act.

Republic of Kenya (2022). Kenya Demographic and Health Survey Nairobi, Kenya National Bureau of Statistics.

Sedgh, G., S. Singh and R. Hussain (2014). Intended and unintended pregnancies worldwide in 2012 and recent trends. Studies in family planning 45(3): 301-314.

Spencer, L., J. Ritchie, J. Lewis and L. Dillon (2004). Quality in qualitative evaluation: a framework for assessing research evidence.

Thornton, A. and D. Filipov (2007). Developmental idealism and family and demographic change in Central and Eastern Europe, Vienna Institute of Demography Wien.

United Nations. (2018). Sustainable Development Goals from https://sdgs.un.org/goals.

Welbourne, P. and J. Dixon (2016). Child protection and welfare: cultures, policies, and practices. European journal of social work 19(6): 827-840.

Ziraba, A. K., C. Izugbara, B. A. Levandowski, H. Gebreselassie, M. Mutua, S. F. Mohamed, C. Egesa and E. W. Kimani-Murage (2015). Unsafe abortion in Kenya: a cross-sectional study of abortion complication severity and associated factors. BMC pregnancy and childbirth 15(1): 1-11.

Downloads

Published

2025-10-11

How to Cite

Laura , N. I., and D. Muia. “Socio-Cultural and Socio-Economic Challenges Faced by Children Born Outside Marriage in Tana River County”. Journal of Sociology, Psychology & Religious Studies, vol. 7, no. 3, Oct. 2025, pp. 91-109, doi:10.53819/81018102t5388.

Issue

Section

Articles