Coffee Policy and Law Certificate

Empowering Farmers, Baristas, and Coffee Entrepreneurs through Legal Literacy and Advocacy

Offered by: Kenya Coffee School (KCS™)
Duration: 4–6 weeks (Flexible / Modular Learning)


🎯 Course Goal

To equip learners with the knowledge, tools, and skills to understand, interpret, and influence coffee laws and policies in Kenya — ensuring smallholder farmers benefit from fair trade, affordable inputs, and sustainable value addition.


📘 Learning Outcomes

By the end of the course, participants will be able to:

  1. Explain Kenya’s coffee policy framework and the key legal institutions governing the sector.
  2. Analyze how national and county coffee laws affect farmers, traders, and consumers.
  3. Propose legal and policy reforms to improve smallholder farmer welfare.
  4. Advocate for fairer systems of pricing, inputs, and trade through organized farmer representation.
  5. Develop a personal or community coffee policy action plan aligned with GOOD Trade Certification principles.

🧭 Course Structure

ModuleTitleKey TopicsOutcomes & Activities
1. Introduction to Coffee Law and PolicyUnderstanding the Coffee Act and Governance Structure– Overview of the Coffee Act 2021
– Institutions: AFA, Coffee Directorate, County Governments
– The role of Parliament, cooperatives, and farmers
Learners map the governance chain of coffee from farmer to regulator.
2. Farmer Rights and Input AffordabilityProtecting the Smallholder Farmer– Legal rights of farmers under Kenyan law
– Input subsidies and cooperatives
– The economics of fertilizer, seedlings, and sustainability
Workshop: Draft a farmers’ charter on input affordability.
3. Coffee Cooperatives, Marketing & Trade LawFrom Factory to Market– Cooperative Societies Act
– Licensing and marketing agents
– Transparent payment systems
– Ethics and accountability
Case Study: Analyze a local cooperative’s governance and suggest reforms.
4. Value Addition and Domestic Consumption PolicyFrom Cherry to Cup– National coffee value addition policy
– Export vs. domestic roasting
– Tax incentives and youth enterprise laws
Project: Create a county-based “Coffee Value Addition Bill” proposal.
5. Education, Inclusion & Farmer EmpowermentLegal Literacy for All– Gender and youth inclusion in coffee policy
– Coffee education in TVETs and universities
– Intellectual property rights for farmer brands
Role Play: Simulate a policy hearing defending a farmer-led idea.
6. Digitalization and GOOD Trade CertificationFuture of Coffee Governance– Digital traceability and direct trade
– GOOD Trade Certification model
– Fairness, transparency, and sustainability in practice
Capstone: Design a local coffee policy reform or digital advocacy campaign.

🧑🏽‍🏫 Teaching & Learning Methods

  • Interactive lectures and discussions
  • Case studies from Kenya and other coffee-producing countries
  • Guest lectures from policymakers, cooperative leaders, and exporters
  • Field visits to coffee cooperatives or county offices
  • Policy simulation and debate sessions
  • Capstone project presentation

🧾 Assessment

ComponentWeight
Participation & Discussions20%
Written Assignments (policy briefs)20%
Case Study Analysis20%
Capstone Project (policy proposal or advocacy plan)40%

🎓 Certification

Upon completion, participants receive a: Kenya Coffee School Certificate in Coffee Policy and Law,
endorsed by GOOD Trade Certification™ — signifying competence in understanding and applying coffee law and governance frameworks.


🌍 Impact

This program creates:

  • Policy-literate farmers and baristas capable of influencing local and national coffee reforms.
  • Youth advocates who can navigate trade systems and push for inclusion.
  • Coffee professionals who can connect farm-level realities with global trade standards.

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