Your complete menu of skills, tools, resources and processes for designing and implementing Sexual & Reproductive Health and Rights projects in Kenya.
This marketplace organises everything you need to design and deliver a successful SRHR project in Kenya --- from the skills on your team, to the tools you use, the resources you mobilise, the processes you follow, and the partners you engage. Browse each section using the menu above.
The human capabilities your team needs --- technical, advocacy, research, and cultural competencies.
Assessment, delivery, advocacy and monitoring tools that power your implementation.
Human, financial and infrastructure resources --- including key funders active in Kenya.
The five-phase implementation journey from situation analysis through to learning and evaluation.
The ecosystem of organisations, government bodies and networks to engage for maximum impact.
The political, legal, cultural and funding landscape you must navigate on the ground.
Human capabilities required across your team
Deep subject matter expertise across the full SRHR spectrum.
Navigate Kenya's legal framework and close the policy-practice gap.
Building trust and driving behaviour change at grassroots level.
Generate, use and communicate evidence to drive impact.
Reaching those left furthest behind requires specialist skills.
Running a well-governed, accountable programme.
Assessment, delivery, advocacy and monitoring tools
Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices survey --- the foundation for measuring project change and impact across the lifecycle.
Map your pathway from inputs to long-term SRHR impact with a robust, evidence-based ToC.
Structured planning tools for goal-setting, indicator tracking and accountability.
Peer-to-peer delivery of SRHR information and contraceptive distribution --- proven effective across Kenya.
WHO and Kenya Ministry of Health standards for adolescent and youth-friendly health facilities.
Technology tools for reaching remote and underserved populations.
Kenya's national health management information system --- your data must feed into this for government alignment.
Mobile-first data collection tools for field teams --- offline capable for low-connectivity areas.
Communications and evidence tools for influencing government and public opinion.
Human, financial and infrastructure resources
\$48 million project across Kenya and 13 countries focused on marginalised communities --- one of the largest active SRHR investments in Kenya right now.
Opportunity Grants of up to £75,000 over 18--36 months for small and medium civil society organisations doing SRHR advocacy in Kenya. Accessible for local NGOs.
Funds family planning, maternal health, GBV, and adolescent SRHR. Strong focus on county-level government systems strengthening and supply chain.
Both active in Kenya SRHR --- EU through consortium models, Canada increasingly filling the gap left by USAID withdrawal in 2025.
HIVOS funds feminist movements and SRHR rights organisations; PPG funds clinical service delivery partners and reproductive rights advocacy.
CRR focuses on litigation and policy; Segal Family Foundation funds smaller grassroots African-led SRHR organisations in East Africa.
The government's central body for procuring and distributing medical commodities including contraceptives. Your project must link to KEMSA for sustainable supply --- avoid creating parallel supply chains that undermine the public system.
Your five-phase implementation journey
Landscape analysis, KAP baseline survey, stakeholder mapping, Theory of Change, LogFrame development, regulatory registration.
3--6 monthsMOUs with county health departments, partnership agreements with CSOs, Technical Working Group formation, community entry meetings.
Months 3--9Train YPPs, teachers, community health workers, police and judiciary. Build staff skills in intersectionality and disability-responsive programming.
Months 4--12Community outreaches, clinical service delivery, CSE sessions, safe spaces, advocacy with county assemblies, GBV response activation.
Months 6--36Quarterly data reviews, monthly YPP monitoring meetings, mid-term and end-of-project evaluations, best practice documentation.
ContinuousAll NGOs must register with the NGO Board and renew certificates annually. Required before any programme activities begin.
Every county where you operate requires formal notification and ideally a signed MOU with the County Health Management Team (CHMT).
If your project includes any formal research component, including KAP surveys, ethics approval is mandatory.
The ecosystem of organisations to engage for maximum impact
Policy alignment, facility integration, commodity supply via KEMSA
CSE curriculum integration, school-based programming approval
Local implementation authority, facility linkages, CHW networks
Budget advocacy, local legislation, county-level SRHR bills
Registration and compliance; builds government legitimacy
Research ethics and study approvals for project research
Technical support, funding, commodities, government systems strengthening
Clinical service delivery, YPP models, adolescent programming
Feminist movement strengthening, rights-based SRHR advocacy
Legal advocacy, litigation support, policy documentation
Technical guidance, YFS standards, clinical protocols
Adolescent SRHR, CSE, child protection linkages
Legal aid, GBV response, women's rights litigation
Gender equality and SRHR youth advocacy --- Johari project model
National civil society coordination on SRHR advocacy
Inclusive programming co-design and social accountability
Navigate cultural and religious barriers; reach conservative communities
Mass SRHR awareness in local languages for low-literacy populations
The landscape you must understand and navigate
Kenya's 2010 Constitution is one of Africa's strongest for SRHR --- but enforcement is inconsistent.
Policies exist. Implementation does not always follow.
Kenya's devolved system means health service delivery is a county function --- and counties vary widely.
The 2025 withdrawal of US foreign aid has created a significant funding and service gap across Kenya's health sector.
Conservative social norms --- shaped by religion and tradition --- are among the biggest SRHR barriers.
Use these to hold government accountable and frame your advocacy.