Martha Mbugua | |
Birth Name: | Martha Mbugua |
Birth Place: | Kenya |
Death Date: | N/A |
Death Place: | N/A |
Nationality: | Kenyan |
Alma Mater: | Loreto High School, Limuru University of Nairobi Kenya School of Law University of Birmingham |
Occupation: | Lawyer |
Years Active: | 2006 - present |
Founding Partner, Law 3Sixty, Nairobi, Kenya. | |
Website: | Homepage |
Martha Mbugua is the founding Partner at Law 3Sixty, a legal firm based in Nairobi, Kenya's capital city. She founded the business in 2017.[1]
From 2015 until 2017, Martha Mbugua was a Partner at Hamilton Harrison & Mathews Law Firm, the largest law firm in Kenya, by lawyer count, based in Nairobi, and a member of the Dentons Law Group.[2]
She made Partner in January 2016 at the age of 31, and was one of the youngest people to make partner in the history of that law firm.[3]
She was born in Kenya circa 1985.[3] She attended Loreto High School, Limuru, in Kiambu County, where she obtained her High School Diploma in 2002.[4]
She was admitted to the University of Nairobi, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Laws degree, in 2007. The following year, she underwent the Advocates Training Program at the Kenya School of Law and as admitted to the Kenyan Bar. She also holds a Master of Laws degree, awarded by the University of Birmingham, in the United Kingdom in 2010.[4]
Martha Mbugua's specialties include international commercial law, commercial finance law and mergers & acquisitions. Over a course of eleven years, starting in 2007, she has worked several large law firms. She started out as a legal associate at Mohammed Muigai Advocates, in Nairobi, Kenya, before moving to Bowman Gilfillan in Johannesburg, South Africa, where she worked for a short time. She also spent brief stints at Barclays Bank of Kenya and at the East African Breweries Limited[4]
She returned to Kenya in 2011 and was hired as an associate at Coulson Harney, rising to Senior Associate while there. She left there in 2014 and joined Hamilton Harrison & Mathews that November.[4]
Ms Mbugua was involved in the restructuring of the Kenya Commercial Bank Group to form a non-operating holding company, as the parent and the country-specific banks as subsidiaries.[4] She was also a member of the legal team that advised the government of Kenya when Helios Investment Partners of the United Kingdom acquired majority shareholding in Telkom Kenya, where the government is a minority shareholder.[3] [5] [6]
In October 2017, the Business Daily Africa newspaper named Martha Mbugua, one of the Top 40 Under 40 Women In Kenya 2017.[7] In December 2018, she served as a member of a five-person panel of judges who selected the Top 40 Men Under 40 In Kenya 2018.[8]
For two years in a row, in 2017 and 2018, IFRL 1000, a global ranking agency ranked Martha Mbugua as a "Rising Star", in her field of law practice.[3] [9]