TY - JOUR ID - 537 T1 - 'We are trained to be married!' : elite formation and ideology in the 'girls' battalion' of the Sudan People's Liberation Army A1 - Pinaud,Cl‚mence Y1 - 2015/// KW - civil wars KW - military personnel KW - militias KW - South Sudan KW - Sudan KW - women RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 375 EP - 393 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.375-393. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Women have supported, willingly or not, the Sudan People's Liberation Army's (SPLA) struggle of 22 years that led to the country's independence in 2011 as part of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement. This article explains the movement's relationship to women by contrasting it with other examples of guerilla armies in sub-Saharan Africa at the time. It highlights the lack of ideological depth of the movement from its inception, and dissects the many roots behind the rank-and-file and the population's hostility toward women's fighting. It analyzes the reasons behind the creation of the only 'Girls' battalion', Ketiba Banat, which became an incubator for the creation of a new female elite and fulfilled political and social functions during the 22 years struggle. It also depicts other groups of women who joined the SPLA and were militarily trained outside of Ketiba Banat. Women's engagement was socially stratified during the war and membership to Ketiba Banat became an engine for increased social differentiation during the war and even more so afterwards. The women who were trained in other battalions but found themselves excluded from post-war neo-patrimonial networks, share the same frustrations than in other African post-conflict contexts. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Dg;Di;C4;D2 M3 - 397740336 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1091638 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 519 T1 - A cautionary tale of Zambia's international sovereign bond issuances A1 - Nalishebo,Shebo A1 - Halwampa,Albert Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: page 32-34. - Met samenvatting KW - public debt KW - securities KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Zambia Institute for Policy Analysis and Research (ZIPAR) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 T3 - Working paper ; no. 22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400559196 L3 - http://www.asclibrary.nl/docs/400559196.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 551 T1 - A slim green silence A1 - Rycroft,Beverly Y1 - 2015/// KW - novels (form) KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 238 CY - Cape Town PB - Umuzi U2 - w06 SN - 1-415-20738-0 AV - AFRIKA Lit.10125 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 393934756 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 523 T1 - A wealth of wisdom : a reference collection of African proverbs A1 - Fochang,Babila George Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Oorspr. uitg.: 2013 Bibliogr.: p. 81 . - Met index KW - Africa KW - Cameroon KW - proverbs (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XV, 87 CY - Bamenda PB - Spears Media Press U2 - w06 SN - 1-942876-01-7 pbk AV - AFRIKA 49706 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 399261435 ER - TY - ADVS ID - 522 T1 - Ady Gasy : the Malagasy way A1 - Nantenaina,Lova Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Malagasi gesproken, Engels, Frans, Chinees, Portugees en Spaans ondertiteld KW - crafts KW - documentary films (form) KW - economic recession KW - informal sector KW - Madagascar KW - social life KW - videos (form) RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Paris PB - Laterit U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This documentary observes daily life in Madagascar, where people tackle the financial crisis inventively and sustainably. "It's the Chinese who produce everything, and we, the Malagasy, fix everything." The words cut into the recycled waste rubber stamp perfectly encapsulate the Malagasy population's relationship with production and consumption: Made in Madagascar avec presque rien (with almost nothing). The people never lose their unique identity and their humor, but they haven't forgotten how to complain, because chaos and corruption are rife among the ruling class. The unhurried observational shots are punctuated by proverb texts that reflect the Malagasy outlook on life: "Envisage the worst, so that the best happens." [Abstract reproduced from DVD] AV - AFRIKA AVM1675 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 399374086 L3 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UlHqwdkMVE ER - TY - BOOK ID - 524 T1 - African museums in the making : reflections on the politics of material and public culture in Zimbabwe A1 - Mawere,Munyaradzi A1 - Thondhlana,Thomas Panganayi A1 - Chiwaura,Henry Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met bibliogr KW - museums KW - Zimbabwe RP - NOT IN FILE EP - X, 337 CY - Mankon PB - Langaa Research and Publishing CIG U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This collective volume presents 13 essays on museums and museology in Zimbabwe. Contributions: Capturing the fading past and making nous of the present-future of African Museums: an introduction; 'Old wine in new bottles': a critical historiographical survey of Zimbabwean museum institutions; Community museums in Zimbabwe as a means of engagement and empowerment: challenges and prospects; 'Orphans in a strange land': controversies and challenges in the repatriation of African cultural property from European museums; Museum practices as perpetuators of an ideology: a Zimbabwean perspective; 'A shadow that refuses to leave': the enduring legacy of colonialismin Zimbabwean museum governance; Museums objects, relics and counter - heritage practices in postcolonial Zimbabwe; Africanising museums on the African soil: a critique of the Western concept of keeping human remains in Zimbabwean museums; Developing sustainable museums through 'greening': a case study of the Zimbabwe Military Museum; Zimbabwean museums in the digital age: a quest to increase museum visibility in public space through social media; Representation, reproduction and transmission of public culture in Zimbabwean museums, commemorations and festivals; Museums, sites and the limits of representation in Africa - a case study of 'traditional villages' at archaeological monuments and sites in Zimbabwe; Museums and formal education curriculum: the utilisation of museums by rural primary school pupils in Zimbabwe. [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 995-679282-9 AV - AFRIKA 49713 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Je;K3 M3 - 398521964 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 531 T1 - After piracy? : mapping the means and ends of maritime predation in the Western Indian Ocean A1 - Dua,Jatin Y1 - 2015/// KW - Indian Ocean KW - piracy KW - Somalia RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 505 EP - 521 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.505-521. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - From 2008 to 2012, a dramatic upsurge in maritime piracy in the Western Indian Ocean captivated global attention and led to the development of robust counter-piracy measures, including the deployment of navies, legal prosecutions, and the use of armed guards on merchant ships transiting through the region. By the end of 2012, incidents of maritime piracy, successful or otherwise, plummeted by over 80% leading many to cautiously declare an end to the Somali piracy cycle. The rise and fall of piracy is primarily seen as an indicator highlighting the strength or weakness of global governance mechanisms at sea or the stability and reach of the central government on land in Somalia. While issues of governance at sea and on land are key factors in explaining the ebb and flow of this practice in the Western Indian Ocean, this article focuses on the particular structure of Somali piracy as a kidnap and ransom economy in order to account for its rise and fall. Framed within a language of work and entrepreneurship, piracy was enabled through systems of risk pooling and credit networks that both allowed for its spectacular expansion and ultimately led to its decline. Emphasizing the framing of piracy as a form of work also ties this practice simultaneously to longer histories of predation in oceanic domains from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, and territorializes it within a wider Somali trans-regional economy in ways that befuddle distinctions between legal and illegal, public and private, formal and informal. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Df;E4 M3 - 397740395 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1092281 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 525 T1 - Ben Barka, Hassan II, De Gaulle : ce que je sais d'eux A1 - Buttin,Maurice Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [501]-505. - Met glos., index, noten KW - Morocco KW - political history KW - political opposition KW - political repression KW - politicians RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 526 CY - Paris PB - Karthala U2 - w06 T3 - Hommes et soci‚t‚s SN - 2-8111-0418-6 AV - AFRIKA 49619 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 398492042 ER - TY - ADVS ID - 518 T1 - Damba Festival, venue Bamvim Y1 - 2015/// KW - chieftaincy KW - Dagomba polity KW - documentary films (form) KW - Ghana KW - religious festivals KW - videos (form) RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [S.l.] PB - Nawas Video Productions U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This documentary was commissioned by the chief of Bamvin, near Tamale in northern Ghana, to document the Damba festival. The festival takes place in the Dagomba lunar month of Damba, corresponding to the third month of the Islamic calendar, Rabia al-Awwal. Damba is celebrated to mark the birth and naming of Muhammad, but the actual content of the celebration is a glorification of the Dagomba chieftaincy, with no specific Islamic motifs. The film shows the celebrations, containing drumming music and dance, without any commentary. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA AVM1680 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400914867 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 550 T1 - Die ballade van Robbie de Wee en andere verhale A1 - Meyer,Deon Y1 - 2015/// KW - short stories (form) KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 336 CY - Kaapstad PB - Human & Rousseau U2 - w06 SN - 978-0-7981-6946-2 AV - AFRIKA Lit.10123 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 395148979 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 544 T1 - Dying is dying, that's all: structural violence and cultural projects in Malawian AIDS proverbs A1 - Hayes,Nicole C. Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - Malawi KW - proverbs RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 229 EP - 237 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.229-237. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This paper examines three Malawian proverbs about AIDS: "AIDS came for people", "Dying is dying, that's all" and "It's in the flour". Proverbs permit Malawians to discuss the otherwise taboo topic of AIDS because they offer a special register and perform a footing shift, a rhetorical manoeuvre that allows the speaker to attribute problematic speech to someone else. The proverbs under consideration convey a sense of powerless in the face of the AIDS epidemic, which is an indicator of the effects of structural violence on the everyday lives of most Malawians. Despite the aura of timeless tradition generally conveyed by proverbs, the author argues that individual Malawians are actually using AIDS proverbs to align themselves with the pursuit of gendered cultural projects, such as multiple concurrent partner sex and transactional sex, which are not traditional at all. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Jb;K1 M3 - 397178263 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1053952 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 549 T1 - coles rurales ‚lectroniques en langues africaines : exp‚rimentation au Cameroun et orientation politique panafricaine A1 - Tadadjeu,Maurice Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met bibliogr., bijl KW - Cameroon KW - indigenous languages KW - information technology KW - language instruction KW - language policy KW - languages of instruction KW - pan-Africanism KW - rural areas KW - schools RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 261 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Cet ouvrage collectif fait le point sur I'exp‚rimentation singuliŠre, mais ambitieuse, de l'informatisation de I'enseignement des/en langues locales dans les ‚coles rurales africaines. L'hypothŠse de base est que le processus d'informatisation des ‚coles rurales africaines entraŒnera une g‚n‚ralisation de l'outil informatique dans le monde rural, comblant ainsi le foss‚ num‚rique entre les zones urbaines et les zones rurales. L'ouvrage comporte deux parties : la premiŠre partie d‚crit I'exp‚rimentation de la phase pilote d'‚coles rurales ‚lectroniques (ERELA) dans quelques langues camerounaises, puis en d‚gage les le‡ons et les perspectives, tandis que la deuxiŠme, qui d‚coule de la premiŠre, pr‚sente l'orientation politique panafricaine d'ERELA. Contributions: 1e partie: Exp‚rimentation pilote d'ERELA Cameroun : le‡ons et perspectives. Politique linguistique postcoloniale du secteur de l'‚ducation au Cameroun (Djiafeua Prosper); coles rurales ‚lectroniques en langues africaines et viabilisation des langues nationales comme un vecteur d'enseignement au Cameroun (Jean Romain Kouesso); ERELA face aux approches de l'usage des TIC … l'‚cole au Cameroun (Maurice Tadadjeu, Laurence Ngoumamba); Enseignement des langues africaines en contexte multilingue et multiculturel : le cas du PROPELCA au Cameroun (Gabriel Mba); Standardisation des langues comme un pr‚alable au d‚veloppement du programme d'‚coles rurales ‚lectroniques en langues africaines (Etienne Sadembouo); La traduction et la terminologie dans le d‚veloppement des langues africaines (Mbala C‚cile, Laurence Ngoumamb); Vers la num‚risation des langues camerounaises (Laurence Ngoumamba); Aspects de la localisation des Technologies de l'Information et de la Communication pour l'enseignement des langues camerounaises (Mathurin Soh, Jean Romain Kouesso); Acquis et perspectives du projet ERELA Cameroun (Maurice Tadadjeu, Jean Romain Kouesso). 2e partie. Orientations d'une politique panafricaine d'ERELA (Maurice Tadadjeu). [R‚sum‚ ASC Leiden] SN - 2-343-05029-5 pbk AV - AFRIKA 49355 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Gc;G1 M3 - 396627471 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 546 T1 - Exploring the Health Belief Model and first-year students responses to HIV/AIDS and VCT at a South African university A1 - Buldeo,Priya A1 - Gilbert,Leah Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - attitudes KW - South Africa KW - students RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 209 EP - 218 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.209-218 : tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The Health Belief Model (HBM) is a psychosocial framework that attempts to explain health behaviour. It is determined by an individual's personal beliefs or perceptions about a disease and the options available to decrease its occurrence. In the context of sexual risk behaviours, literature reveals that knowledge about HIV/AIDS and Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT) are key strategies in the management and prevention of HIV. This study was conducted in 2011, the same year the First Things First campaign was implemented in universities across South Africa to maximise opportunities for HIV testing among youth. It aimed to identify first-year students' responses to HIV/AIDS and VCT at the University of the Witwatersrand (WITS). The mixed research methods consisted of self-administered structured questionnaires with a sample population of 195 first-year students and 2 in-depth interviews with experts in the field of HIV/AIDS. Descriptive statistical analyses (frequencies and cross-tabulations) and thematic content analysis was carried out. The findings indicate that students are willing to know their status. The positive influence of peers is a motivation for those accessing VCT. However, some students do not access VCT due to personal fears while other students do not access VCT because of their low individual risk perception for HIV due to sexual abstinence. It concludes that university students' self-efficacy and cues to action might bring about a positive change in the future of the epidemic within a university context. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Kf;I1 M3 - 397178247 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1052527 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 528 T1 - Green lion A1 - Rose-Innes,Henrietta Y1 - 2015/// KW - felines KW - novels (form) KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 263 CY - Century City PB - Umuzi U2 - w06 N2 - "When a lion at a breeding park mauls an old school friend of his, Con steps in as the keeper of Sekhmet, the last remaining black-maned lioness in the world. In a Cape Town where fences keep people and wildlife apart, park officials and investors fret about their big-cat project. And while Con grows steadily more bonded to his enigmatic charge, a cult of animal lovers with obscure alchemical aims seeks to claim the lioness as their own. When she escapes, Sekhmet engulfs the city's imagination, stirring up rumours of terror and magic. In Con's quest to track her down, he must enter the wilderness of a cordoned-off Table Mountain - and his own dark history."--Dust jacket SN - 1-415-20685-6 AV - AFRIKA Lit.10122 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 397751184 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 539 T1 - HIV-related disabilities: an extra burden to HIV and AIDS healthcare workers? A1 - Egeraat,Leonie van A1 - Hanass-Hancock,Jill A1 - Myezwa,Hellen Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - disabled KW - health care KW - health personnel KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 285 EP - 294 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.285-294 : fig., tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Healthcare workers have been at the forefront of dealing with the impact of HIV and AIDS at all stages of the pandemic. Through in-depth interviews with 10 healthcare workers in a semi-urban hospital setting in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, the authors aim to understand healthcare workers' experiences with disability in the context of HIV. They used the International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health (ICF) as a guiding framework. Healthcare workers described HIV-related disabilities on all three levels of disability, namely impairments/ body function, activity limitations and participation restrictions, as affecting the livelihood of their patients and household members. They encounter several challenges in dealing with the increased needs of care and support for people living with HIV who experience HIV-related disabilities. These challenges include excessive work load, lack of resources and training and emotional strain in dealing with disability. The authors conclude that healthcare workers need support to respond to the increased needs of people living with HIV who have HIV-related disabilities. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Kf;I1 M3 - 397178328 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1084938 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 548 T1 - HIV/AIDS knowledge and stigma among women of reproductive age in Ethiopia A1 - Gurmu,Eshetu A1 - Etana,Dula Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - attitudes KW - Ethiopia KW - women RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 191 EP - 199 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.191-199 : tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - HIV/AIDS stigma is one of the major public health challenges in Ethiopia. This study examined knowledge about HIV/AIDS and factors behind stigmatisation towards people living with the virus based on demographic and health survey data collected in 2011 from women in the age group 15-49 years. The result shows that 49.3% of rural women had adequate knowledge about HIV/AIDS compared with 74.7% of urban women. About three-fourths (72.1%) of the rural women had stigmatising attitudes towards people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) whilst the proportion in urban areas was only about a third (34.2%). The likelihood of having adequate knowledge about HIV/AIDS was significantly higher among educated women but lower among those living in Afar, Somali, and Gambella regions and Dire Dawa City. Women with higher levels of education and frequent access to media had a lower tendency to stigmatise people living with the virus. Adequate knowledge about HIV/AIDS was also significantly associated with lower likelihood of stigmatisation. The results generally indicate that HIV/AIDS stigma in Ethiopia is partly explained by people's knowledge about HIV/AIDS and by socio-cultural factors that shape their perception of the epidemic. Awareness-raising efforts should thus consider the socio-cultural contexts in which stigma occurs to tackle discrimination against people living with HIV/AIDS. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Dd;I1 M3 - 397178212 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1051066 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 552 T1 - Introduction of xenophobia and citizenship : the everyday politics of exclusion and inclusion in Africa A1 - Fourchard,Laurent A1 - Segatti,Aurelia Y1 - 2015/// KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - ethnic relations KW - foreigners KW - Kenya KW - national identity KW - Nigeria KW - South Africa KW - violence KW - xenophobia RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2015), vol.85, no.1, p.2-153 : foto's, krt. VL - 85 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Recent literature on Africa has focused attention on the increasing number of forms of belonging using different labels: autochthony, nativism, indigeneity, ethnicity, and in some cases xenophobia. In the African contexts, decolonization struggles have specifically shaped the type of nation-building enterprises that have emerged in the postcolonial period. This themed part-issue sheds light on concurrent processes associated with the redefinition of postcolonial citizenships: the exclusion of, mobilization against, and violent suppression of outsiders, but also their inclusion, and the multiple forms taken by subversion and resistance to exclusion. Drawing on case studies from four countries that have all gone through specific types of exclusionary violence over the past two decades: Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa. Contributions: "Mobutu's ghost": mobilizing against foreign retailers in contemporary Congo (Aurelia Segatti); Bureaucrats and indigenes: producing and bypassing certificates of origin in Nigeria (Laurent Fourchard); Becoming "cosmo": displacement, development and disguise in Ongata Rongai (Loren B. Landau); Violence and everyday interactions between Katangese and Kasaians: memory and elections in two Katanga cities (Sandrine Vinckel); Articulations of belonging: the politics of ethnic and religious pluralism in Bauchi and Gombe states, North-East Nigeria (Adam Higazi and Jimam Lar); Everyday politics and collective mobilization against foreigners in a South African shack settlement (Tamlyn Monson). Bibliogr., notes, ref., summaries in English and French. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/10/02/ M1 - Ea;C1 M3 - 391018620 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0001972014000746 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 533 T1 - Islam, secularist government, and state-civil society interaction in Mozambique and South Africa since 1994 A1 - Kaarsholm,Preben Y1 - 2015/// KW - civil society KW - Islamic movements KW - Mozambique KW - Muslim brotherhoods KW - South Africa KW - State-society relationship RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 468 EP - 487 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.468-487. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article explores state-civil society interactions in Mozambique and South Africa with a focus on Islamic groupings, and places the two countries within an Indian Ocean coastal continuum of links to East Africa, India, and the Arab world. Contrasting the histories of dominant-party rule since the transitions in 1994 to multiparty-ism in Mozambique and to democracy in South Africa, the article discusses the development of Islamic organisations including both transnational Sufi orders and modernist reform movements as important components in local civil societies. The article contrasts the spaces for accommodation of Islamic groups that have been created in South Africa with the more radical secularism that has been in place in post-Independence Mozambique. Finally, the article discusses the effects of this contrast on possibilities for stability and democratic consolidation in the context of the 2014 elections in South Africa and Mozambique. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Jc;Kf;D2 M3 - 397740379 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1082255 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 526 T1 - L'‚tat d'injustice au Maghreb : Maroc et Tunisie A1 - Meddeb,Hamza A1 - Bono,IrŠne Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met noten KW - development KW - governance KW - Maghreb KW - Morocco KW - social inequality KW - social justice KW - Tunisia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 442 CY - Paris PB - Karthala U2 - w06 T3 - Recherches internationales SN - 2-8111-1517-X pbk AV - AFRIKA 49622 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 398491585 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 527 T1 - L'UGTT, une passion tunisienne : enquˆte sur les syndicalistes en r‚volution, 2011-2014 A1 - Yousfi,HŠla Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 241-253. - Met bijl., noten KW - 2010-2019 KW - political change KW - protest KW - trade unions KW - Tunisia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 262 CY - Paris [etc.] PB - Karthala [etc.] U2 - w06 N2 - Tunisian revolution; Tunis; politics and government; 21st century SN - 9973-33447-7 AV - AFRIKA 49627 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 398491283 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 534 T1 - Locating the Indian Ocean : notes on the postcolonial reconstitution of space A1 - Presthold,Jeremy Y1 - 2015/// KW - economic history KW - Indian Ocean KW - social networks KW - trade KW - trade routes RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 440 EP - 467 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.440-467. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The networks of human relation that define the Indian Ocean region have undergone significant reconfiguration in the last half-century. More precisely, the economic insularity of the region has diminished while the postcolonial nation has both restricted movement and reoriented the political imaginations of people along the rim. At the same time, the Indian Ocean has been revivified as a unit of social exchange and analysis, particularly since the end of the Cold War. This article explores the meaning of Indian Ocean Africa in the context of a multipolar world by focusing on how the dictates of nations have transformed the region and how the petroleum economy as well as shifting means of social engagement have engendered new linkages. The essay argues that although the postcolonial era affected the closure of certain historical routes of connectivity, relationships structured by contemporary nations and air travel, among other things, have encouraged perceptions of regional coherence. What one might term basin consciousness has begun to reverse the introverted politics of the early postcolonial era and animate the Indian Ocean as an idea. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Ba;L3 M3 - 397740360 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1091639 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 520 T1 - Nigeria's booming borders : the drivers and consequences of unrecorded trade A1 - Hoffmann,Leena Koni A1 - Melly,Paul Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met noten, samenvatting KW - informal sector KW - Nigeria KW - trade RP - NOT IN FILE CY - London PB - Chatham House U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 N2 - Introduction. -- An enabling environment? context and drivers of informal trade. -- Towards formalization: efforts and impediments. -- Nigeria's major trade flows. -- Conclusion. Nigeria's booming informal trade is costly for society, business and government, yet a critical opportunity exists to formalize such trade and drive more sustainable and less volatile growth. This report makes a number of recommendations for how Nigeria could encourage more formal trade SN - 1-7841-3099-0 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400452804 L3 - http://www.asclibrary.nl/docs/400452804.pdf ER - TY - JOUR ID - 541 T1 - Reckoning HIV/AIDS care: a longitudinal study of community home-based caregivers and clients in Swaziland A1 - Root,Robin A1 - Van Wyngaard,Arnau A1 - Whiteside,Alan Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - community participation KW - health care KW - Swaziland RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 265 EP - 274 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.265-274 : fig., tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The article is a descriptive case study of a community home-based care (CHBC) organisation in Swaziland that depicts the convergence of CHBC expansion with substantially improved health outcomes. Comprised of 993 care supporters who tend to 3,839 clients in 37 communities across southern Swaziland, Shiselweni Home-based Care (SHBC) is illustrative of many resource-limited communities throughout Africa that have mobilised, at varying degrees of formality, to address the individual and household suffering associated with HIV/AIDS. To better understand the potential significance of global and national health policy/programming reliance on community health workers (task shifting), the authors analysed longitudinal data on both care supporter and client cohorts from 2008 to 2013. Most CHBC studies report data from only one cohort. Foremost, their analysis demonstrated a dramatic decline (71.4%) among SHBC clients in overall mortality from 32.2% to 9.2% between 2008 and 2013. Although the study was not designed to establish statistical significance or causality between SHBC expansion and health impact, the findings detail a compelling convergence among CHBC, improved HIV health practices, and declines in client mortality. The analysis indicated (1) the potential contributions of community health workers to individual and community wellbeing, (2) the challenges of task-shifting agendas, above all comprehensive support of community health workers/care supporters, and (3) the importance of data collection to monitor and strengthen the critical health services assigned to CHBC. Detailed study of CHBC operations and practices is helpful also for advancing government and donor HIV/AIDS strategies, especially with respect to health services decentralisation, in Swaziland and similarly profiled settings. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Kg;I1 M3 - 397178301 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1059864 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 521 T1 - Sensational movies : video, vision, and Christianity in Ghana A1 - Meyer,Birgit Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 333-356. - Met filmogr., index The video film industry -- Accra, visions of the city -- Moving pictures and lived experience -- Film as revelation -- Picturing the occult -- Animation -- Mediating traditional culture KW - films KW - Ghana KW - Pentecostalism KW - traditions RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIX, 380 CY - Oakland, CA PB - University of California Press U2 - w06 T3 - The anthropology of Christianity ; 17 N2 - "Tracing the rise and development of the Ghanaian video film industry between 1985 and 2010, Sensational Movies examines video movies as seismographic devices recording a culture and society in turmoil. This book captures the dynamic process of popular filmmaking in Ghana as a new medium for the imagination and tracks the interlacing of the medium's technological, economic, social, cultural, and religious aspects. Stepping into the void left by the defunct state film industry, video movies negotiate the imaginaries deployed by state cinema on the one hand and Christianity on the other. Birgit Meyer analyzes Ghanaian video as a powerful, sensational form. Colliding with the state film industry's representations of culture, these movies are indebted to religious notions of divination and revelation. Exploring the format of "film as revelation," Meyer unpacks the affinity between cinematic and popular Christian modes of looking and showcases the transgressive potential haunting figurations of the occult. In this brilliant study, Meyer offers a deep, conceptually innovative analysis of the role of visual culture within the politics and aesthetics of religious world making."--Provided by publisher SN - 0-520-28767-3 AV - AFRIKA 49717 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 39954206X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 532 T1 - Shaykh Abdullahi al-Qutbi and the pious believer's dilemma : local moral guidance in an age of global Islamic reform A1 - Reese,Scott S. Y1 - 2015/// KW - Islam KW - Islamic history KW - Islamic movements KW - reform KW - Somalia RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 488 EP - 504 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.488-504. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Using the writings of the religious scholar `Abdullahi al-Qutbi', this article examines the 'transregional' nature of Muslim reformist discourse in the early twentieth century and the way in which the trajectories of individuals, objects and ideas cut across the largely imaginary boundaries traditionally used to divide the Middle East and Africa. African Muslims have maintained intimate ties with their non-African brethren across space through various intellectual, economic and political relationships throughout the history of Islam. However, they have also remained entwined across time via engagement with the more or less commonly accepted canon of the faith and what Talal Asad has termed the 'discursive tradition'. This essay demonstrates the persistence of these processes through the age of European colonialism into the early twentieth century. But equally important is the way in which the increasingly elaborate and rapid networks of empire created in the nineteenth century facilitated and intensified the interaction of both people and ideas helping create the modern horizontally integrated community of believers. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Df;L3 M3 - 397740387 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1082257 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 543 T1 - Social models of HIV risk among young adults in Lesotho A1 - Bulled,Nicola L. Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - risk KW - social environment RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 239 EP - 254 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.239-254 : tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Extensive research over the past 30 years has revealed that individual and social determinants impact HIV risk. Even so, prevention efforts focus primarily on individual behaviour change, with little recognition of the dynamic interplay of individual and social environment factors that further exacerbate risk engagement. Drawing on long-term research with young adults in Lesotho, the author examines how social environment factors contribute to HIV risk. During preliminary ethnographic analysis, she developed novel scales to measure social control, adoption of modernity, and HIV knowledge. In survey research, she examined the effects of individual characteristics (i.e., socioeconomic status, HIV knowledge, adoption of modernity) and social environment (i.e., social control) on HIV risk behaviours. In addition, she measured the impact of altered environments by taking advantage of an existing situation whereby young adults attending a national college are assigned to either a main campus in a metropolitan setting or a satellite campus in a remote setting, irrespective of the environment in which they were socialised as youth. This arbitrary assignment process generates four distinct groups of young adults with altered or constant environments. Regression models show that lower levels of perceived social control and greater adoption of modernity are associated with HIV risk, controlling for other factors. The impact of social control and modernity varies with environment dynamics. App., bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Kd;I1 M3 - 39717828X L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1054295 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 545 T1 - Telling stories and adding scores: measuring resilience in young children affected by maternal HIV and AIDS A1 - Ebers”hn,Liesel Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - children KW - psychological research KW - psychology KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 219 EP - 227 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.219-227 : tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article demonstrates how a concurrent mixed method design assisted cross-cultural comparison and ecological descriptions of resilience in young South African children, as well as validated alternative ways to measure resilience in young children. In a longitudinal randomised control trial, which investigated psychological resilience in mothers and children affected by HIV/AIDS, teh authors combined a qualitative projective story-telling technique (Dss Fable) with quantitative data (Child Behaviour Checklist). The children mostly displayed adaptive resilience-related behaviours, although maladaptive behaviours were present. Participating children use internal (resolve/agency, positive future expectations, emotional intelligence) and external protective resources (material resources, positive institutions) to mediate adaptation. Children's maladaptive behaviours were exacerbated by internal (limited problem-solving skills, negative emotions) and external risk factors (chronic and cumulative adversity). Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Kf;I1 M3 - 397178255 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1052822 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 547 T1 - Temporal distribution of baseline characteristics and association with early mortality among HIV-positive patients at University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria A1 - Akinyemi,Joshua Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - mortality KW - Nigeria RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 201 EP - 207 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.201-207 : graf., tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The first six months of HIV care and treatment are very important for long-term outcome. Early mortality (within 6 months of care initiation) undermines care and treatment goals. This study assessed the temporal distribution in baseline characteristics and early mortality among HIV patients at the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria from 2006-2013. Factors associated with early mortality were also investigated. This was a retrospective analysis of data from 14,857 patients enrolled for care and treatment at the adult antiretroviral clinic of the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria. Effects of factors associated with early mortality were summarised using a hazard ratio with a 95% confidence interval obtained from Cox proportional hazard regression models. The mean age of the subjects was 36.4 (SD=10.2) years with females being in the majority (68.1%). While patients' demographic characteristics remained virtually the same over time, there was significant decline in the prevalence of baseline opportunistic infections (2006-2007=55.2%; 2011-2013=38.0%). Overall, 460 (3.1%) patients were known to have died within 6 months of enrollment in care/treatment. There was no significant trend in incidence of early mortality. Factors associated with early mortality include: male sex, HIV encephalopathy, low CD4 count (< 50 cells), and anaemia. To reduce early mortality, community education should be promoted, timely access to care and treatment should be facilitated and the health system further strengthened to care for high risk patients. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Fn;I1 M3 - 397178239 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1052526 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 530 T1 - The absent pirate : exceeding justice in the Indian Ocean A1 - Jones,Stephanie Y1 - 2015/// KW - English language KW - films KW - novels KW - piracy KW - Somali KW - Somalia KW - world RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 522 EP - 535 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.522-535. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Legal, literary and visual archives are replete with absent pirates. It is remarkable how often the pirate is only partly delineated or seen from a distance, is ghostly, or plotted off-stage. These figurations variously nerve and unnerve imperial discourses and narratives of justice. This paper addresses some recent, fictional non-representations of 'the Somali pirate'.The author proposes that this absenting of the pirate is critical to the texts' various approaches or reproaches to justice. The author further suggests that these fictions are concerned with an ethics of proximity - of physical space and geographical affect - that exceeds the primacy and virtue of 'justice'. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Aa;K2;K3 M3 - 397740409 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1087682 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 536 T1 - The House of Federation : the practice and limits of federalism in Ethiopia's second federal chamber A1 - Bihonegn,Tesfa Y1 - 2015/// KW - Ethiopia KW - federalism KW - parliament RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 394 EP - 411 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.394-411 : tab. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Multiethnic Ethiopia has been 'exercising' federalism for the last two decades with unique constitutional and institutional designs. This article deals with House of Federation, the second chamber of the federal parliament, which, in both its composition and competence, hardly shares the attributes that characterize federal chambers elsewhere. While previous studies have focused on its powers of constitutional interpretation, this article attempts to provide a wider picture of the House of Federation by discussing its composition and competences, the constitutional and political underpinnings behind its (unique) design, and associated ramifications and paradoxes. It shows how representing individual groups rather than member states at the federal chamber, though constitutionally justifiable, is practically problematic in light of the powers constitutionally attributed to the House of Federation, which are predominantly regional in their dimensions and implications. With regard to its competences, the article argues, the fact that the House of Federation is non-legislative is not only an indication to the paucity of 'shared-rule' in Ethiopia, but also paradoxical in view of the emphasis on group 'self-rule' and the guardian powers that the House has in respect to the federal constitutional order. Discussing its considerable arbitration assignments, apart from the widely discussed constitutional interpretation, it demonstrates that Ethiopia's House of Federation is also unusually and predominantly adjudicative. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Dd;D2 M3 - 397740344 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1082713 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 538 T1 - Transitional justice and democracy in Uganda : between impetus and instrumentalisation A1 - Arnould,Val‚rie Y1 - 2015/// KW - democratization KW - empowerment KW - legal reform KW - transitional justice KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 354 EP - 374 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.354-374. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - While claims abound regarding transitional justice's importance for democracy building in transitioning countries, empirical investigations of these remain limited or have produced contradictory findings. This article seeks to contribute to these debates by investigating the relationship between transitional justice and democratic institution building in Uganda - looking in particular at the rule of law, the security forces and participation. It does so by exploring the causal mechanisms linking transitional justice to democracy, that is, the means through which transitional justice exerts its impact. Transitional justice is widely expected to impact democratic institution building through three mechanisms: (de)legitimation, reform, and empowerment. However, this article finds that in Uganda, transitional justice's impact through these is more circumscribed than has so far been assumed, and that it sometimes impacts democratic institution building negatively. The Ugandan experience furthermore suggests that in contexts of armed conflict and a hybrid regime, expectations about the extent to which transitional justice can support democratic institution building should be lowered. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Hf;F1 M3 - 397740328 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1089698 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 529 T1 - Understanding al-Shabaab : clan, Islam and insurgency in Kenya A1 - Anderson,David M. A1 - McKnight,Jacob Y1 - 2015/// KW - Islamic movements KW - Kenya KW - Somalia KW - terrorism RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 536 EP - 557 JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.536-557. VL - 9 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Harakat al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen has proven itself to be a highly adaptable organisation. Their most recent evolution has seen them transform from an overt, military and governmental force in southern Somalia to a covert, insurgent and anarchic force in Kenya. This article indicates how al-Shabaab has reinvented itself in Kenya. Both 'clan' and 'Islam' are often thought of as immutable factors in al-Shabaab's make-up, but here the authors show that the organisation is pragmatic in its handling of clan relations and of Islamic theology. The movement is now able to exploit the social and economic exclusion of Kenyan Muslim communities in order to draw them into insurgency, recruiting Kenyans to its banner. Recent al-Shabaab attacks in Kenya, launched since June 2014, indicate how potent and dangerous their insurgency has become in the borderlands and coastal districts where Kenya's Islamic population predominates. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Df;Hc;C2 M3 - 397740417 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1082254 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 540 T1 - When we are together I feel at home : types and sources of social support among youth newly diagnosed with HIV in Kenya: implications for intervention A1 - Lypen,Kathryn D. Y1 - 2015/// KW - adolescents KW - AIDS KW - Kenya KW - social networks RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 275 EP - 284 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.275-284 : tab. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Social support helps youth manage psychosocial stress. Though many studies have investigated the role of social support in helping youth in developed countries cope with their HIV status, such research is lacking among youth living in sub-Saharan African countries, including Kenya. The importance of research on youth living with HIV in Kenya is enhanced given young people's unique developmental stages and the HIV prevalence rate of 8.8% among Kenyans aged 25 to 29 years. To gain further insight, qualitative focus group interviews were conducted with 53 youth aged 18 to 27 years who lived in the informal urban settlement of Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya. A phenomenological approach was used to analyse the data from which four major types of social support were identified: 1) emotional; 2) informational; 3) appraisal; and 4) instrumental. Within each of these overarching themes more specific sub-themes were identified. The youth also reported receiving social support from eight main sources: 1) family; 2) friends; 3) clinicians and clinical services; 4) counsellors; 5) support groups; 6) religious sources; 7) partners; and 8) other. These findings suggest that various forms of social support, provided by diverse sources, which may fall outside of those commonly involved in interventions, can help youth living with HIV cope with their diagnosis and promote healthy lifestyles. Future research should investigate the roles and interactions of different types and sources of support, specifically as they relate to interventions aiming to ameliorate the experiences of youth newly diagnosed with HIV. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Hc;I1 M3 - 39717831X L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1082145 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 542 T1 - Wisdom and counselling: a note on advising people with HIV/AIDS in Ghana A1 - Geest,Sjaak van der Y1 - 2015/// KW - AIDS KW - counselling KW - Ghana RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 255 EP - 264 JA - African Journal of AIDS Research: (2015), vol.14, no.3, p.255-264 : ill. VL - 14 IS - 3 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article raises the question of whether the practice of HIV/AIDS counselling in Ghana can be linked to the wisdom that older people are said to have and use when they give advice to younger family members. Older people believe they have wisdom and life experience that young people should listen to; counsellors hold an opposite view about their work, insisting that it is they who listen to people with HIV/AIDS to help them make their own decisions. In actual practice, however, HIV/AIDS counsellors predominantly give information and advice, for at least three reasons. Firstly, clients urgently need a substantial amount of medical information about the causes and prevention of HIV in order to assess their situation and make decisions. Secondly, the traditional hierarchy between nurse and patient is difficult to reverse when the two meet during counselling. Thirdly, encouraging the client not to lose hope often takes the form of a pep-talk, which leaves little room for listening by the counsellor. This paper pleads for peer counselling, as a format that combines a relative equality between counselling partners with the authoritative knowledge of the counsellor. This article is based on anthropological fieldwork among older people in a rural community and counsellors in a hospital in the Kwahu region of southern Ghana. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Ff;I1 M3 - 397178298 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2015.1055580 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 535 T1 - Women, marketplaces and exchange partners amongst the Marakwet of northwest Kenya A1 - Pollard,Grace A1 - Davies,Matthew I.J. A1 - Moore,Henrietta L. Y1 - 2015/// KW - informal sector KW - Kenya KW - Marakwet KW - rural areas KW - social networks KW - women RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of Eastern African Studies: (2015), vol.9, no.3, p.412-439 : foto, graf., krt., tab. VL - 9 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Based on recent fieldwork, this paper examines the intersecting economic activities of Marakwet women in northwest Kenya with a particular focus on exchange friendships. The authors highlight the need to expand previous definitions of 'tilia', based on male exchange of livestock, to include a variety of exchange friendships including those between women. Through investigating women's economic activities in local marketplaces, they demonstrate that marketplaces facilitate the formation of 'tilia' partnerships between women from different areas, and shape women's kinship and friendship interactions within the context of their market activities. The authors argue that there is a synergy between women's market activities and exchange relationships, but they also emphasise that market activities and 'tilia' exchange relationships are part of the matrix of household economic decision-making navigated by Marakwet women. This has important implications for how one views and supports the social and economic contributions of women's activities. Women's 'tilia' relations provide a number of benefits to their trading activities, households and communities, and as such the authors suggest that rural development interventions would do well to consider and build upon these networks of exchange relations. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Hc;C2;E1 M3 - 397740352 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1089699 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 570 T1 - Are South Africans free? A1 - Hamilton,Lawrence Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [139]-150 . - Met index, noten KW - economic inequality KW - political participation KW - social conditions KW - South Africa KW - standard of living RP - NOT IN FILE EP - IX, 155 CY - London [etc.] PB - Bloomsbury Academic U2 - w06 N2 - Political freedom? -- Quality of life -- Political representation -- Elite compromise -- Conclusion: overcoming South Africans' lack of freedom SN - 1-472-52693-7 AV - AFRIKA 49670 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 374935033 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 563 T1 - Capacity development strategy Y1 - 2014/// KW - Africa KW - capacity building KW - UN committees RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Addis Ababa] PB - United Nations , Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400470675 L3 - http://www.uneca.org/sites/default/files/PublicationFiles/capacity_ development_strategy.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 562 T1 - Concept note on ECA country profiles : task force on country profiles Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bijl., noten KW - Africa KW - UN committees RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Addis Ababa] PB - United Nations , Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400472422 L3 - http://www.uneca.org/sites/default/files/PublicationFiles/Concept-note- on-ECA-Country-Profiles_en.pdf ER - TY - JOUR ID - 554 T1 - Debating the rediscovery of liberalism in Zambia : responses to Harri Englund A1 - Gordon,David M. Y1 - 2014/// KW - research KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 658 EP - 667 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2014), vol.84, no.04, p.658-667. VL - 84 IS - 04 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In Africa, volume 83 number 4 (November 2013), Harri Englund discussed several recent books on Zambia published preceding the country's fiftieth independence anniversary. His article explored the ways in which recent publications by Zambian and Zambianist authors have launched a fresh research agenda, and he focused in particular on the scholarly engagement with liberalism. In this article, responses are published from David M. Gordon, Bizeck Jube Phiri and Giacomo Macola, whose work was discussed in the article, and a comment by James Ferguson on more scholarly directions. Bibliogr. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/10/02/ M1 - Jd;A2 M3 - 400948893 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0001972014000527 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 553 T1 - Hosts, strangers and the tenure politics of livestock corridors in Mali A1 - Brottem,Leif Y1 - 2014/// KW - drylands KW - land tenure KW - livestock policy KW - Mali KW - soil management RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2014), vol.84, no.4, p.638-657 : krt. VL - 84 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In dryland West Africa, policy makers have come to acknowledge livestock mobility as a sound adaptation strategy for variable dryland climate regimes. In Mali, the national government is taking measures to support mobility in the form of grazing zones, conflict management mechanisms and, most notably, livestock passage corridors. These corridors are part of a long and contentious history of territorialization in agrarian West Africa. This article demonstrates through a comparative case study that livestock corridors can accomplish the agroecological objective of improving herd mobility but they also have unforeseen political impacts that depend on socio-spatial relations between farmers and herders. By historicizing corridors and contextualizing them within the hoststranger relationship that is found throughout the region, the article reveals the different meanings that boundary-making processes take on for autochthonous farmers and mobile herders. In an area where ethnic Fulani herders have settled independently from farming communities, the latter have rejected a proposed corridor. In contrast, farmers in areas where herders are seasonal guests have supported the same measure. These divergent outcomes do not depend simply on different levels of resource competition, but, instead, on the ways in which corridors and their boundaries become inscribed in perceived land claims and power relations between competing groups. Bibliogr., notes, ref., summary in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/10/02/ M1 - Fk;J2 M3 - 400957396 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0001972014000424 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 556 T1 - Introduction : mutual help in an era of uncertainty A1 - Rodima-Taylor,Daivi A1 - B„hre,Erik Y1 - 2014/// KW - Africa KW - informal savings and credit associations KW - self-help KW - social security KW - South Africa KW - Tanzania RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 507 EP - 613 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2014), vol.84, no.4, p.507-613. VL - 84 IS - 4 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - African communities are witnessing a proliferation of diverse arrangements of mutual security that draw upon old and new solidarities and inventively merge market logic with reciprocal forms of distribution and sharing. Various voluntary associations and informal economic networks, financial mutuals and savings/credit groups are becoming central in regulating access to resources and defining patterns of association in African communities. The articles in this themed part-issue explore these social security networks and organizations, concentrating on their ambiguous potential to empower the marginal as well as to contribute to social strife and political conflict. Contributions: Topics and tangents for mutual help in uncertainty (Parker Shipton); Harnessing the ancestors: mutuality, uncertainty and ritual practice in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa (Andrew Ainslie); Passageways of cooperation: mutuality in post-socialist Tanzania (Daivi Rodima-Taylor); A trickle-up economy: mutuality, freedom and violence in Cape Town's taxi associations (Erik B„hre); Rehabilitating the hoard: the social dynamics of unbanking in Africa and beyond (Gustav Peebles). Bibliogr., notes, ref., summary in English and French. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Ba;E1 M3 - 400948842 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0001972014000461 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 567 T1 - King of the jungle : fiction A1 - Yadok,Bizuum Y1 - 2014/// KW - Nigeria KW - novels (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 271 CY - Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria PB - Kraft Books Limited U2 - w06 T3 - Kraftgriots SN - 978-91820-9-0 AV - AFRIKA Lit.10105 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 39926339X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 559 T1 - May 2014 tripartite elections monitoring report Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bijl., samenvatting KW - 2014 KW - election monitoring KW - elections KW - Malawi RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Malawi PB - Malawi Human Rights Commission U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400537915 L3 - http://www.hrcmalawi.org/electionsreport.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 569 T1 - May I have this dance : the story of my life A1 - Ngcaba,Connie Manse Y1 - 2014/// KW - apartheid KW - autobiographies (form) KW - family KW - political opposition KW - South Africa KW - women RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XI, 131 CY - Cape Town PB - Face2Face U2 - w06 SN - 0-9922017-9-9 AV - AFRIKA 49710 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 398523150 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 565 T1 - Partnership strategy for the Economic Commission for Africa Y1 - 2014/// KW - Africa KW - UN committees RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Addis Ababa] PB - ECA U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400452898 L3 - http://www.uneca.org/sites/default/files/PublicationFiles/ECA- Partnership-framework-strategy_ENG.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 561 T1 - PMRC parastatals policy analysis : maximising Zambia's national resources and economic growth A1 - Armitage,Alex Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: pages 27-28. - Met bijl., noten KW - economic development KW - economic policy KW - public enterprises KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Policy Monitoring and Research Centre (PMRC) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400477718 L3 - http://www.pmrczambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Parastatals-Policy- Analysis.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 560 T1 - PMRC policy analysis : Zambia's double taxation agreements : towards optimised tax revenue collection : unlocking Zambia's potential A1 - Siwale,Agatha Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: pages 31-33. - Met noten KW - fiscal policy KW - international agreements KW - taxation KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Policy Monitoring and Research Centre (PMRC) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 40053388X L3 - http://www.asclibrary.nl/docs/40053388X.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 564 T1 - Putting Africa first : a summary of the ECA reform to support transformative development in a renascent Africa Y1 - 2014/// KW - Africa KW - economic development KW - reform KW - UN committees RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Addis Ababa] PB - United Nations , Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400453045 L3 - http://www.uneca.org/sites/default/files/PublicationFiles/ PuttingAfricaFirst_ENG_web.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 566 T1 - The ECA communications strategy : how communications and media relations will project and help bring about the "new" ECA Y1 - 2014/// KW - Africa KW - communication KW - marketing KW - UN committees RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Addis Ababa] PB - ECA U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M3 - 400428245 L3 - http://repository.uneca.org/handle/10855/22223 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 555 T1 - The political ecology of incursions : livestock, protected areas and socio-ecological dynamics in the Mara region of Kenya A1 - Butt,Bilal Y1 - 2014/// KW - Kenya KW - livestock KW - national parks and reserves KW - wildlife protection RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2014), vol.84, no.4, p.614-637 : fig., krt., tab. VL - 84 U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Across the world, the presence of domestic animals in protected areas (PAs) is considered an "incursion" that threatens the economic and ecological viability of these areas. Dominant narratives about incursions inaccurately describe the relationships between people and PAs because they lack adequate contextualization. In this article, the author relies on a political-ecological framework to argue for an alternative narrative. Through a case study from a PA in southern Kenya, he demonstrates how incursions are modern co-productions that arise from the intersections between changing political geographies of resource control and variable animal geographies of resource utilization, thus clarifying a long-standing debate about the presence of domestic animals in PAs. He relies on direct empirical and supporting evidence from place-based studies to illustrate the spatial and temporal differences in resource access strategies of wildlife and livestock within and outside the PA. He contrasts these against changing land tenure and resource management policies to highlight how livestock movements into PAs are patterned in ways that reflect the changing nature of PA management, the material conditions of the landscape, and the agency of animals. Through these investigations, this paper provides a more accurate and nuanced explanation for livestock movements into PAs. Bibliogr., notes, summary in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M1 - Hc;J2 M3 - 400948850 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0001972014000515 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 558 T1 - The right to equality and non-discrimination on basis of sexual orientation and gender identity in Zambia : towards combating discrimination of sexual orientation and gender identity in Zambia A1 - Khati,Mamoletsane A1 - Kiefer,Lilian Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met samenvatting KW - homosexuality KW - human rights KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Panos Institute Southern Africa (PSAf) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400538741 L3 - http://www.panos.org.zm/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Panos-Right-to- Equality-Report.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 568 T1 - Trends in Nollywood : a study of selected genres A1 - Ayakoroma,Barclays Foubiri Y1 - 2014/// N1 - BIbliogr.: p. 325-352 . - With index KW - cinema KW - film history KW - literary criticism KW - Nigeria KW - Nollywood RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 365 CY - Ibadan PB - Kraft Books Limited U2 - w06 SN - 978-978-91820-1-5 AV - AFRIKA 49664 Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 399261311 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 557 T1 - Used motor vehicle imports and the impact on transportation in Zambia : working towards the formulation of sound economic policies Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 27. - Met bijl., noten, samenvatting KW - automobiles KW - imports KW - transport KW - used goods KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Zambia Institute for Policy Analysis & Research U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 T3 - Working paper ; no. 21 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400545802 L3 - http://www.asclibrary.nl/docs/400545802.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 575 T1 - Exploring the Zambian diaspora : tapping into the potential of the Zambian diaspora A1 - Kaunda,Salim Y1 - 2013/// KW - diasporas KW - migration KW - remittances KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Policy Monitoring and Research Centre U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 T3 - Diaspora series AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400477734 L3 - http://www.pmrczambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/PMRC-Diaspora- Series-Exploring-the-Zambia-Diaspora-Tapping-into-Potential-of-the-Zambia- Diaspora.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 573 T1 - Millennium development goals : progress report , Zambia, 2013 A1 - Buus,Camilla Hebo A1 - Smith,Georgina Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Met noten, samenvatting KW - development planning KW - evaluation KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - United Nations Development Programme U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400541629 L3 - http://www.zm.undp.org/content/dam/zambia/docs/mdgs/MDG%20Report%202013. pdf ER - TY - JFULL ID - 571 T1 - Modern Africa : politics, history and society Modern Africa : politics, history and society, ISSN 2336-3274 Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Verschijnt 2x per jaar KW - Africa KW - history KW - politics KW - social sciences RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Modern Africa : politics, history and society U2 - Vol. 1, no. 1 (2013) - ... w06 SN - 2336-3274 AV - Elektronisch tijdschrift Y2 - 2016/10/02/ M3 - 400958007 L3 - http://modernafricajournal.org/category/issues/ ER - TY - BOOK ID - 572 T1 - Promoting pre-trial justice in Zambia : a survey report on the committal process, 2013 Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Met noten, samenvatting KW - administration of justice KW - criminal procedure KW - rights of the accused KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Human Rights Commission U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400544946 L3 - http://www.hrc.org.zm/index.php/publications/general-publications/file/ 53-promoting-pre-trial-justice-in-zambia-a-survey-report-on-the-committal- process-2014 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 574 T1 - Using radio to drive development in Southern Africa : report on the Radio Platform for Community Development (RPCD), October 2013 Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: page 27. - Met samenvatting KW - community development KW - radio KW - Southern Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Panos Institute Southern Africa U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400537397 L3 - http://www.panos.org.zm/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Panos-RPCD-Project- final1.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 577 T1 - Building policy coherence between social protection floors and national social and economic development strategies : conference report A1 - Bitso,Bitso Paul Y1 - 2012/// KW - 2012 KW - conferences KW - poverty KW - social security KW - Southern Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka, Zambia PB - Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 SN - 9982-99730-0 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400477807 L3 - http://www.social-protection.org/gimi/gess/RessourcePDF.action; jsessionid=e7b8c2bf391fe8c77feefcb30fea641656a945d83c572aca87408ace6a560718. e3aTbhuLbNmSe34MchaRahaOchn0?ressource.ressourceId=43937 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 576 T1 - Investigating corruption in Malawi : training resources for journalists Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Bibliogr.: pages 45-46. - Met noten KW - corruption KW - journalism KW - Malawi RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lilongwe [etc.] PB - Malawi Economic Justice Network [etc.] U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400558556 L3 - http://iaj.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Investigating-Corruption- in-Malawi_web.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 578 T1 - Sant‚ de la reproduction, genre et droits des enfants au Congo : enjeux et d‚fis : une analyse approfondie des donn‚es de l'EDSCI-2005 A1 - Beninguisse,Gervais A1 - Kalambayi Banza,Barth‚l‚my A1 - Bingoly-Liword,Germain Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - AIDS KW - child health KW - child labour KW - child mortality KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - family planning KW - malnutrition KW - maternal mortality KW - reproductive health KW - sexuality RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 343 CY - Louvain-la-neuve PB - Harmattan-Academia U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Cet ouvrage fait l'analyse de quelques questions de population et de sant‚ qui ont ‚t‚ abord‚es superficiellement dans le rapport de la premiŠre Enquˆte D‚mographique et de Sant‚ (EDS) de la R‚publique du Congo r‚alis‚e en 2005. Neuf sujets y sont examin‚s, qui, dans le contexte congolais, sont demeur‚s faiblement document‚s faute de donn‚es appropri‚es. La premiŠre partie 'Sexualit‚ et planification familale' revisite les thŠmes suivantes: 1) attitudes, v‚cu et protection des rapports sexuels pr‚conjugaux par les jeunes congolais, 2) d‚terminants du recours au test de d‚pistage du VIH/Sida, et 3) les besoins non satisfaits en matiŠre de planification familiale. La deuxiŠme partie examine la th‚matique de la sant‚ de la mŠre et de l'enfant en relation avec la pauvret‚: 4) pauvret‚ et facteurs … risque de mortalit‚ maternelle, 5) pauvret‚ et mortalit‚ des enfants de moins de cinq ans, et 6) les d‚terminants de la malnutrition des femmes et des enfants. Enfin, la troisiŠme partie aborde les questions relatives … la scolarisation et au travail des enfants: 7) pouvoir de n‚gociation de la femme en matiŠre de reproduction, 8) les d‚terminants familiaux de la scolarisation au Congo, et 9) travail des enfants. [R‚sum‚ ASC Leiden] SN - 2-87209-992-1 AV - AFRIKA 49279 Y2 - 2016/08/02/ M1 - Gj;I1 M3 - 396135676 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 579 T1 - Sixth national development plan, 2011-2015 : sustained economic growth and poverty reduction Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met noten KW - 2010-2019 KW - economic development KW - national plans KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lusaka PB - Ministry of Finance and National Planning U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400556510 L3 - http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTZAMBIA/Resources/SNDP_Final_Draft_ _20_01_2011.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 580 T1 - Education, politics & social change in Ethiopia A1 - Milkias,Paulos A1 - Kebede,Messay Y1 - 2010/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [192]-203. - Met gloss., index, noten KW - educational history KW - educational systems KW - Ethiopia KW - social change RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 216 CY - Los Angeles, CA PB - TSEHAI U2 - w06 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The contributions in this volume explore the role of education in Ethiopia over the last hundred years, placing it in the context of Ethiopian history, language, religion, politics, culture and gender. It examines, among others, the role of western education, the impact of being instructed in English, the invention and imposition of a new WoGaGoDa language in the South, and the national educational strategic plans. Contents: The curse of English as a medium of instruction in Ethiopian education system (Tekeste Negash); Comparing traditional and modern education: the decentering of Ethiopia (Messay Kebede); The challenge of modernity: western education and the demise of feudalism in Ethiopia (Paulos Milkias); The education system of Haile Selassie's government: the roots of political fiasco (Bekele Haile-Selassie Thomas); Towards a critical Ethiopian theory of education (Maimire Menasemay); Education, modernity and revival movements: making sense of the Pentecostal expansion in Ethiopia (Tibebe Eshete ); Governance, language politics and education in southern Ethiopia: the tribulations of inventing WoGaGoDa (Data Dea); development policy, education and training: women and change in contemporary Ethiopia (Judith Narrowe); Prevailing over the power of continuity? (Eva Poluha). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 1-599-07043-X AV - AFRIKA 48590 Y2 - 2016/10/02/ M3 - 391039032 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 581 T1 - National anti-corruption policy Y1 - 2009/// KW - corruption KW - government policy KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Lusaka] PB - Republic of Zambia U1 - Free access. U2 - w06 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2016/09/02/ M3 - 400474360 L3 - http://eaz.org.zm/downloads/file/200909010537180.National.pdf ER - TY - JFULL ID - 582 T1 - Libyan Studies Libyan studies, ISSN 0263-7189 Y1 - 1970/// N1 - Verschijnt 1x per jaar Voortz. van: Annual report / Society for Libyan Studies KW - history KW - Libya KW - Libyan studies KW - social sciences RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Libyan Studies U2 - Vol. 43 (2012) - .... w06 SN - 2052-6148 AV - Elektronisch tijdschrift Y2 - 2016/10/02/ M3 - 390629588 L3 - http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=LIS ER -