TY - JOUR ID - 694 T1 - 'We have killed this animal together, may I also have a share?' : local-national political dynamics in Mwinilunga District, Zambia, 1950s1970s A1 - Pea,Iva Y1 - 2014/// KW - central-local government relations KW - local politics KW - political history KW - political opposition KW - politics KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 925 EP - 941 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2014), vol.40, no.5, p.925-941. VL - 40 IS - 5 U2 - w9 N2 - Zambian political history has been viewed predominantly through the prism of the national, by focusing on high politics, official ideology and Big Men. The local level equally has to be taken into consideration, as local forces and interests have shaped the translation of national politics in the everyday lives of voters. Moreover, considering the local context can facilitate an understanding of national politics itself. Through the case of Mwinilunga District, the dynamics of the local-national interplay before and after independence will be examined. What were the origins, motives and long-term implications of political opposition in the area? This article analyses the personal objectives behind political agitation, the role of chiefs as mediators between politicians and the population, geopolitical connections to Angola and Congo, and the contrast between postcolonial development policies and local claims of neglect. Paradoxically, understanding local opposition can shed light on the appeal of UNIP's broad nationalist coalition in other parts of Zambia. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Jd;D2 M3 - 391020331 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2014.946212 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 700 T1 - 50 ans de cultures noires au Sngal : (1960-2010) A1 - Tamba,Moustapha A1 - Blin,Myriam Odile Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 253-255. - Met bijl., noten KW - arts KW - cultural cooperation KW - cultural policy KW - festivals KW - Senegal RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 267 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w9 N2 - Premire partie: Politiques culturelles du Sngal de 1960 2010. Chapitre I: Sous le Prsident Lopold Sdar Senghor (1960-1980); chapitre II: Sous le Prsident Abdou Diouf (1981-1999); chapitre III: Sous le Prsident Abdoulaye Wade. Deuxime partie: La dcentralisation de la culture et les industries culturelles. Chapitre IV: Dakar, mtropole culturelle; chapitre V: La dcentralisation culturelle et artistique; chapitre VI: L'influence des cultures trangres au Sngal; chapitre VII: Les industries culturelles au Sngal. Troisime partie: Le monde de la culture et des arts. Chapitre VIII: Les entrepreneurs culturels et artistiques; chapitre IX: Les administrateurs et mdiateurs de la culture et de l'art; chapitre X: Les intellectuels et praticiens de la culture et de l'art SN - 2-296-99904-2 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48404 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 389525774 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 728 T1 - Advocacy in the time of xenophobia : civil society, the state, and the politics of migration in South Africa A1 - Pugh,Sarah A. Y1 - 2014/// KW - civil society KW - migration policy KW - political action KW - South Africa KW - xenophobia RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 227 EP - 247 JA - Politikon: (2014), vol.41, no.2, p.227-247. VL - 41 IS - 2 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - When xenophobic violence erupted across South Africa in May 2008, the role of civil society organisations was central in response efforts. Some analysts noted, however, that much civil society response tended to be humanitarian in nature, rather than presenting any sustained political challenge that would address the underlying structural causes of such violence. This article focuses on the capacity of migrant, refugee, and asylum seeker advocacy and service organisations to offer an effective political challenge to the exclusionary migration policies and practices of the state. It highlights the substantial difficulties organisations face in advocating for socially and politically unpopular populations, amidst the realities of state mismanagement of migration. These restraints result in a limited, though not entirely closed, space for the concerted advocacy of a progressive migration management regime, let alone the construction of broad-based political and systemic challenges to the socio-economic status quo. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - Kf;C6 M3 - 381164586 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589346.2014.905255 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 702 T1 - Changing places : rock art and Holocene landscapes in the Wadi al-Ajal, south-west Libya A1 - Barnett,Tertia A1 - Guagnin,Maria Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum. in English and French KW - archaeology KW - landscape KW - Libya KW - rock art RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of African Archaeology: (2014), vol.12, no.2, p.165-182 : ill., krt. VL - 12 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 389093955 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 720 T1 - De la signare la diriyank sngalaise : trajectoires fminines et visions partages A1 - Lo,Aissata Kane Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 275-284. - Met noten KW - customs KW - female elite KW - racially mixed persons KW - Senegal KW - social history KW - social status RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 288 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w9 SN - 978-2-296-99863-6 AV - AFRIKA 48157 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 381183602 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 725 T1 - Did floor-crossing alienate South African voters? : evidence from municipal legislatures A1 - McLaughlin,Eric S. Y1 - 2014/// KW - elections KW - political parties KW - politicians KW - South Africa KW - voting RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 289 EP - 310 JA - Politikon: (2014), vol.41, no.2, p.289-310 : tab. VL - 41 IS - 2 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Floor-crossing, the practice of defecting from one political party to join another, is common in democracies. While empirical research has answered a number of questions about the determinants of party switching and the motivations of party switchers, little is known about the consequences of floor-crossing in electoral democracies, especially for the voters who watch their elected representatives 'switch uniforms' in the middle of the game. From 2002 to 2008, floor-crossing was legal in South Africa and defections at all levels of government were numerous. Critics of the country's floor-crossing regime often speculated that rampant defections would drive voters away from the polls and undermine voters' trust and political engagement. This paper uses data cataloguing defections in municipal legislatures to assess the extent to which floor-crossing in South Africa may indeed have alienated voters. The paper finds strong evidence that floor-crossing may have suppressed voter turnout, at least in immediately subsequent elections, but only weak evidence to suggest that floor-crossing had any direct or lasting effect on voters' attitudes about government and the politicians who run it. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - Kf;D2 M3 - 381164616 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589346.2014.905261 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 727 T1 - Doing research on sensitive topics in political science : studying organised criminal groups in Cape Town A1 - Lambrechts,Derica Y1 - 2014/// KW - government KW - organized crime KW - political science KW - research KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 249 EP - 265 JA - Politikon: (2014), vol.41, no.2, p.249-265. VL - 41 IS - 2 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article provides a review of the method and approach of a study done on a research topic in the field of political science, namely the impact of organised criminal groups on social control by the state. It is based on a study on organised criminal groups and local governance in the Cape Flats, Cape Town (South Africa). Research can be regarded as the production of knowledge and the research process is the roadmap or guide used in order to produce knowledge about a specific topic under consideration. As a result of the sensitive nature of the research subject, particular care was taken in designing the research process that guided the study. This article offers an explanation of the specific research design and research methodology selected in order to analyse the features of the relationship between local governance, societies and organised criminal groups. The following elements are discussed: the case study research design, the qualitative research methodology, the field research process and research techniques, research ethics and, finally, basic safety while doing fieldwork. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - Kf;A2 M3 - 381164594 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589346.2014.905257 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 704 T1 - Environmental archaeology at Mikindani, Tanzania : towards a historical ecology of the Southern Swahili Coast A1 - Pawlowicz,Matthew A1 - Stoetzel,John A1 - Macko,Stephen Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum. in English and French KW - archaeology KW - ecology KW - Swahili KW - Tanzania RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of African Archaeology: (2014), vol.12, no.2, p.119-139 : fig., krt., tab. VL - 12 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 389086452 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 695 T1 - Epic of Aphrike A1 - Read,N.K. Y1 - 2014/// RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 3 CY - Epping PB - Afrikkana Publishing U2 - w9 M3 - 391013130 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 698 T1 - Ha Makotoko : later stone age occupation across the Pleistocene/Holocene transition in western Lesotho A1 - Mitchell,Peter A1 - Arthur,Charles Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum. in English and French KW - archaeology KW - Lesotho KW - Stone Age RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of African Archaeology: (2014), vol.12, no.2, p.205-232 : ill., krt. VL - 12 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 389921157 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 706 T1 - Histoires de croissance ou le casse-tte des villes portuaires ouest-africaines A1 - Daudet,Brigitte Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, rf., rs. en anglais et en franais KW - ports KW - towns KW - urban development KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 49 EP - 53 JA - Revue africaine des affaires maritimes et des transports: (2014), no.6, p.49-53 : foto's, graf., tab. IS - 6 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 388650168 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 699 T1 - In the name of the people : Angola's forgotten massacre A1 - Pawson,Lara Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 261-263. - Met gloss., index, noten KW - 1977 KW - Angola KW - coups d'tat KW - journalistic reports (form) KW - MPLA KW - political repression KW - protest RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 271 CY - London PB - I.B. Tauris U2 - w9 SN - 1-7807-6905-9 AV - AFRIKA 48392 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 389527122 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 726 T1 - Institutions and policy change : the development of the child support grant in South Africa A1 - Schreiber,Leon Amos Y1 - 2014/// KW - child care KW - family allowances KW - reform KW - social policy KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 267 EP - 288 JA - Politikon: (2014), vol.41, no.2, p.267-288 : graf., tab. VL - 41 IS - 2 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Despite the attempt to transform the system of state child support in South Africa shortly after the transition to democracy, the initial changes resulting in the implementation of the Child Support Grant were only partial in nature. This paper explains why institutional stickiness in the shape of failed reform efforts occurred in certain areas, while radical change took place in others. This effort involves the sequential integration of insights from the historical and rational choice variants of neoinstitutionalism. The resulting analysis accounts for the formation of distinct reform preferences, the strategic interactions which shaped eventual outcomes, as well as the ultimate incompleteness of policy transformation in a process of institutional layering. The paper therefore represents a practical attempt at overcoming the divisions between these neoinstitutionalist approaches, while also producing an analysis of a policy arena that is undertheorised. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - Kf;C1 M3 - 381164608 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589346.2014.905258 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 707 T1 - La rglementation des pches maritimes en Mauritanie et la Convention des Nations Unies sur le droit de la mer A1 - Coulibaly,Bakary Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Notes, rf., rs. en anglais et en franais KW - international law of the sea KW - marine fisheries KW - Mauritania KW - UN RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 36 EP - 48 JA - Revue africaine des affaires maritimes et des transports: (2014), no.6, p.36-48. IS - 6 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 388650001 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 719 T1 - La route des clameurs : roman A1 - Diarra,Ousmane Y1 - 2014/// KW - artists KW - Islamic movements KW - Mali KW - novels (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 171 CY - Paris PB - Gallimard U2 - w9 T3 - Continents noirs SN - 2-07-014628-6 AV - AFRIKA Lit.9801 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 38200289X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 709 T1 - Le Code de conduite de Yaound et la stratgie de lutte contre la piraterie et la criminalit maritimes dans le Golfe de Guine A1 - Ndend,Martin Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Notes, rf., rs. en anglais et en franais KW - Central Africa KW - Communaut conomique des Etats de l'Afrique Centrale KW - ECOWAS KW - international agreements KW - piracy KW - regional security KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 10 EP - 19 JA - Revue africaine des affaires maritimes et des transports: (2014), no.6, p.10-19 : tab. IS - 6 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 388649690 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 715 T1 - Le jardin des pleurs : (inspir d'une histoire vraie) : roman A1 - Nedali,Mohamed Y1 - 2014/// KW - corruption KW - Morocco KW - novels (form) KW - rule of law RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 251 CY - La Tour-d'Aigue PB - Aube U2 - w9 T3 - Collection regards croiss SN - 2-8159-1034-9 pbk AV - AFRIKA Lit.9835 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 383847915 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 712 T1 - Le jolfo ou wolof senegalensis : origine et hritages A1 - Khalifa Niasse,Ahmed Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 235-239. - Met bijl., noten KW - lexicology KW - loan words KW - Senegal KW - Wolof language RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 242 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w9 SN - 2-296-99874-7 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48165 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 386035407 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 708 T1 - Le recours subrogatoire de l'assureur maritime des facults l'importation en droit camerounais et communautaire des transports : juges, soyez vigilants! A1 - Kenguep,Ebnzer Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Notes, rf., rs. en anglais et en franais KW - Cameroon KW - insurance KW - maritime law KW - maritime transport RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 26 EP - 35 JA - Revue africaine des affaires maritimes et des transports: (2014), no.6, p.26-35. IS - 6 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 388649887 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 697 T1 - Making modern girls : a history of girlhood, labor, and social development in colonial Lagos A1 - George,Abosede A. Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 277-293. - Met index, noten Bevat: Introduction: Girling the subject --1. Working well: gender, status, and social reform among educated elite women in colonial Lagos, 1900/1920 --2. Making the modern child in the era of imperial liberalism --3. Setting up the welfare city: prelude to the Children and Young Person's Ordinance of 1943 --4. The street hawker, the street walker, and the salvationist gaze --5. Problem girls, private vice, and public secrets in Lagos --6. Delinquents to breadwinners and hawkers to homemakers: gender, juvenile justice, and reform in the welfare city --7. For women, girls, and the nation? the politics of girl saving in the era of anticolonial nationalism --Conclusion: banning hawkers sixty years later. KW - child abuse KW - child labour KW - colonial period KW - female elite KW - girls KW - juvenile delinquency KW - Nigeria KW - social change KW - social history KW - urban history RP - NOT IN FILE EP - X, 301 CY - Athens [etc.] PB - Ohio University Press U2 - w9 T3 - New African histories SN - 0-8214-2116-6 (pb) alk. paper AV - AFRIKA 48362 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 390735191 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 723 T1 - Missionaries and female empowerment in colonial Uganda : new evidence from Protestant marriage registers, 1880-1945 A1 - Meier zu Selhausen,Felix Y1 - 2014/// KW - marriage KW - missions KW - Protestant churches KW - Uganda KW - women's education KW - women's employment RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Economic History of Developing Regions: (2014), vol.29, no.1, p.74-112 : graf., krt., tab. VL - 29 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Protestant missionaries have recently been praised for their relatively benign attitudes concerning women's education in Africa. Using a novel dataset of 5,202 Protestant brides born between 1880 and 1945 from urban and rural Uganda, this paper offers a analysis of the role of mission education on African women's socio-economic position within the household. The paper finds that although mission education raised the women's literacy skills way above national levels, women were largely excluded from participating in the colonial wage labour market. In this context, the missionary society presented an almost exclusive source of female wage labour in the areas of religious service, schooling and medical care. While literacy per se did not affect women's marriage behaviour, women who worked for the missionaries married significantly later in life and married men closer to their own age, signalling a shift in the power balance between parents and daughters and between husband and wife. On average, daughters of fathers deeply entrenched in the missionary movement had the highest chances to access wage employment. Paternal mission networks were important for Protestant women's work outside the household during colonial times. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Hf;L3 M3 - 38116988X L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2014.927110 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 718 T1 - Moroccan feminist discourses A1 - Sadiqi,Fatima Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [219]-234. - Met index, noten KW - Berber KW - feminism KW - Islam KW - Morocco RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XVIII, 238 CY - New York PB - Palgrave Macmillan U2 - w9 T3 - Comparative feminist studies series N2 - Introduction -- The Berber challenge -- The historicity of Berber women's agency -- Sources of authority in Moroccan culture -- Secular and Islamic feminist discourses -- The Berber dimension SN - 978-1-13-739268-8 AV - AFRIKA 48202 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 382783557 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 722 T1 - Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (1918-2013) : a tribute to his contribution to literature A1 - Chapman,Michael Y1 - 2014/// KW - biography KW - letters KW - literature KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 3 EP - 11 JA - Current Writing: (2014), vol.26, no.1, p.3-11. VL - 26 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This tribute to Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela acknowledges his achievement through a focus on his writings and sayings. Touching on his speeches, letters, conversations, extracts from his previously unpublished writings and his insights on the occasion, the tribute turns to the life that is portrayed in the autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom. This is an autobiography which, in structure and intent, has parallels with a long tradition of South African literature, particularly in the motif of the rural-urban journey, as most famously encapsulated in Alan Paton's 'Cry, the Beloved Country' (1948). My contention is that Mandela's salient 'literary' strength is to be found in a style that embodies the powerful idea. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] This tribute to Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela acknowledges his achievement through a focus on his writings and sayings. Touching on his speeches, letters, conversations, extracts from his previously unpublished writings and his insights on the occasion, the tribute turns to the life that is portrayed in the autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom. This is an autobiography which, in structure and intent, has parallels with a long tradition of South African literature, particularly in the motif of the rural-urban journey, as most famously encapsulated in Alan Paton's 'Cry, the Beloved Country' (1948). My contention is that Mandela's salient 'literary' strength is to be found in a style that embodies the powerful idea. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Kf;K2 M3 - 381174263 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1013929X.2014.897461 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 721 T1 - Notes on Joyce and South Africa: coincidence and concordance A1 - Voss,Tony Y1 - 2014/// KW - literary criticism KW - literature KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 19 EP - 28 JA - Current Writing: (2014), vol.26, no.1, p.19-28. VL - 26 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - These notes offer first a sketch of the significance of James Joyce to a selection of South African writers, from N P van Wyk Louw to Ingrid Winterbach. This is followed by an account of Joyce's allusions to South African in his work up to and including Ulysses. The sequence of allusions in the novel suggests that they follow the plot as it moves in a general sense from politics and alienation to friendship and love. The reading leads to an account of the recurrent South African markers in Joyce's biography. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] These notes offer first a sketch of the significance of James Joyce to a selection of South African writers, from N P van Wyk Louw to Ingrid Winterbach. This is followed by an account of Joyce's allusions to South African in his work up to and including Ulysses. The sequence of allusions in the novel suggests that they follow the plot as it moves in a general sense from politics and alienation to friendship and love. The reading leads to an account of the recurrent South African markers in Joyce's biography. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Kf;K2 M3 - 38117428X L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1013929X.2014.897464 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 714 T1 - Ocean of trade : South Asian merchants, Africa and the Indian Ocean, c. 1750-1850 A1 - Machado,Pedro Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 276-306. - Met index, noten KW - 1700-1799 KW - 1800-1849 KW - East Africa KW - India KW - Indian Ocean KW - international trade KW - mercantile history KW - slave trade KW - textiles RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XV, 315 CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press U2 - w9 N2 - "Offers an innovative study of trade, production and consumption across the Indian Ocean between the years 1750-1850" SN - 1-10-707026-0 AV - AFRIKA 48199 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 384075959 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 711 T1 - O en est l'urbanisation en Centrafrique ? A1 - Mossoa,Lambert Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 105-108. - Met noten KW - Central African Republic KW - rural-urban migration KW - towns KW - urbanization RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 111 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w9 T3 - tudes africaines SN - 2-343-03864-3 AV - AFRIKA 48163 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 386035490 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 729 T1 - Religious freedom within a liberal constitution : an overview of Muslim personal law in South Africa A1 - McDonald,Zahraa Y1 - 2014/// KW - family law KW - freedom of religion KW - Islamic law KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 209 EP - 226 JA - Politikon: (2014), vol.41, no.2, p.209-226. VL - 41 IS - 2 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The relationship between the state and religion is widely debated. This article contributes to the debate questioning whether legislating Muslim Personal Law (MPL) in South Africa would constrain constitutional provisions related to religious freedom. Seeking an answer to this question, a framework based on the liberal theory related to religious freedom is constructed and applied to an overview of the MPL process in South Africa. Conceivable outcomes in view of proposed legislation are then sketched, illustrating that legislating MPL in a manner that provides for religious sanction is likely to constrain constitutional provisions related to religious freedom. This does not, however, imply that Muslim marriages and MPL generally should not be recognised; only that legislative reforms must be void of religious sanction. Thus the article proposes that South African law be reformed to incorporate practices associated with MPL without religious sanction. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - Kf;F1 M3 - 381164578 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589346.2014.905254 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 716 T1 - Reprsentations de l'altrit dans la littrature orale africaine A1 - Baumgardt,Ursula Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - Bulu KW - Bwa KW - ethnic relations KW - Fulani KW - gender relations KW - Igbo KW - Manding KW - oral literature KW - Subsaharan Africa KW - Tupuri KW - Wolof KW - Zarma RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 309 CY - Paris PB - Karthala U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Tradition orale N2 - Ouvrage collectif, ce livre porte sur les diffrentes formes d'altrit dans la littrature orale africaine. De janvier 2006 dcembre 2009, les runions mensuelles de l'opration de recherche 'Littrature orale' de l'Unit mixte de recherche (UMR) du Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) 'Langage, langues et cultures d'Afrique noire' (LLACAN) ont t consacres ce sujet. Les contributions comprennent: 1. Introduction: approches de la notion d'altrit et gense d'un projet de recherch (Ursula Baumgardt); 2. Qui est l'Autre? De quelques figures de l'altrit dans la littrature orale mandingue (Jean Derive); 3. L'Autre parmi nous: l'altrit dans des chants tupuri (Suzanne Ruelland); 4. Altrit et crolisation partir d'un conte malgache: une altrit peut en cacher une autre (Lee Haring); 5. tiologie de l'altrit noire dans le conte oriental et maghrbin (Fatma Agoun Perpre); 6. Nnanga kn, le premier homme blanc en pays boulou (Cameroun) (Marie-Rose Abomo-Maurin); 7. L'homme et l'animal si proches et si diffrents: relation chasseur-gibier chez les Mandingues (A. Kedzierska Manzon); 8. Ces mots pour dire l'Autre : l'exemple du rcit de Toula (Sandra Bornand); 9. Jeux de miroir et jeux de dupes: rflexion sur l'altrit travers deux genres oraux wolof (Ndiabou Sega Tour); 10. Le clibataire comme figure de l'altrit dans la littrature orale des Bwa (Mali) (Ccile Leguy); 11. De l'altrit d'un alter ego dans la littrature orale peule du Massina (Mali) (Christiane Seydou); 12. L'altrit dans la posie d'exhortation wolof: chants de paysans et chants de lutteurs (Abdoulaye Keita); 13. Apparence, identit et altrit dans la littrature orale igbo (Nigeria) (Franoise Ugochukwu); 14. L'altrit peut-elle constituer un objet de la recherche dans l'analyse littraire ? (Bernard Mouralis). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 2-8111-1263-4 AV - AFRIKA 48010 Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Ea;K2 M3 - 383478375 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 701 T1 - The Al Khiday cemetery in Central Sudan and its "Classis/Late Meroitic" period graves A1 - Usai,Donatella Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum. in English and French KW - cemeteries KW - Kush polity KW - Sudan RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of African Archaeology: (2014), vol.12, no.2, p.183-204 : ill., krt. VL - 12 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 389094889 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 724 T1 - The contribution of African women to economic growth and development in the pre-colonial and colonial periods : historical perspectives and policy implications A1 - Akyeampong,Emmanuel A1 - Fofack,Hippolyte Y1 - 2014/// KW - Africa KW - economic development KW - economic history KW - gender division of labour KW - women workers KW - women's work RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 42 EP - 73 JA - Economic History of Developing Regions: (2014), vol.29, no.1, p.42-73 : graf. VL - 29 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Bringing together history and economics, this paper presents a historical and processual understanding of women's economic marginalization in sub-Saharan Africa from the pre-colonial period to the end of colonial rule. It is not that women have not been economically active or productive; it is rather that they have often not been able to claim the proceeds of their labour or have it formally accounted for. The paper focuses on the pre-colonial and colonial periods and outlines three major arguments. First, it discusses the historical processes through which the labour of women was increasingly appropriated even in kinship structures in pre-colonial Africa, utilizing the concepts of 'rights in persons' and 'wealth in people'. Reviewing the processes of production and reproduction, it explains why most slaves in pre-colonial Africa were women and discusses how slavery and slave trade intensified the exploitation of women. Second, it analyzes how the cultivation of cash crops and European missionary constructions of the individual, marriage, and family from the early decades of the 19th century sequestered female labor and made it invisible in the realm of domestic production. Third, it discusses how colonial policies from the late 19th century reinforced the 'capture' of female labour and the codification of patriarchy through the nature and operation of the colonial economy and the instrumentality of customary law. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Ba;C4;L1 M3 - 381169871 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2014.923154 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 713 T1 - The Equestrian monument : Reiterdenkmal Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Ondertitel op de omslag: A chronological documentation of reports, newspaper clippings and photos/illustrations Met chron KW - articles (form) KW - monuments KW - Namibia KW - pictorial works (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 152 CY - Windhoek PB - Kuiseb Verlag U2 - w9 SN - 99945-7626-7 AV - AFRIKA 48139 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 385929935 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 703 T1 - The Lalibela rock hewn site and its landscape (Ethiopia) : an archaeological analysis A1 - Bosc-Tiess,Claire Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum. in English and French KW - archaeology KW - churches KW - Ethiopia RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of African Archaeology: (2014), vol.12, no.2, p.141-164 : ill., krt. VL - 12 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 389091863 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 696 T1 - Tradition and change in contemporary West and East African fiction A1 - Okuyade,Ogaga Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bibliogr., index, noten KW - Africa KW - literary criticism KW - novels KW - prose KW - social problems KW - women RP - NOT IN FILE PB - Rodopi U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Matatu, ISSN 0932-9714 ; no. 45 N2 - Drawing on different theoretical insights, the essays in this volume capture the energy of the emergent novel in East and West Africa, offering different perspectives on what has been variously termed the 'new wave', 'emerging generation', and 'third generation'. Subjects addressed include the politics of identity, especially when (re)constructed outside the homeland or when African indigenous values are eroded by globalization and transnationalism. Other essays examine once-taboo concerns, including gendered accounts of same-sex sexualities. Most of the essays deal with shifting perceptions by African women of their social condition in patriarchy in relation to such issues as polygamy, adultery, male dominaton and the woman's quest for fulfilment and respect through access to quality education and full economic and socio-political participation. Themes taken up include the sexual exploitation of women and criminality, and the exposure of children to violence. Examined is also the contemporary textualization of orality (the trickster figure). Writers discussed include: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Okey Ndibe, Flora Nwapa, Nawal El Saadawi, Ama Ata Aidoo, Goretti Kyomuhendo, Chika Unigwe, Helon Habila, Ike Oguine, Chris Abani, Tanure Ojaide, Maik Nwosu, Unoma Azuah, Jude Dibia, Lola Shoneyin, Mary Karooro Okurut, Violet Barungi, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani, Abidemi Sanusi, Akachi Ezeigbo, Sefi Atta, Kaine Agary, Kojo Laing, Ahmadou Kourouma, Uwen Akpan, and Alobwed'Epie. [Journal abstract, edited] SN - 978-90-420-3806-6 geb AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M1 - Ba;K2 M3 - 391005855 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 705 T1 - Un modle innovant de la pche artisanale menac : le cas de la pche aux pots poulpe en Mauritanie A1 - Kane,Elimane Abou Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Ann., bibliogr., notes, rf., rs. en anglais et en franais KW - fisheries KW - Mauritania RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Revue africaine des affaires maritimes et des transports: (2014), no.6, p.54-64 : ill., krt. U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 388650443 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 730 T1 - Violent modernity : gender, race and bodies in contemporary South African politics A1 - Hassim,Shireen Y1 - 2014/// KW - freedom of speech KW - heads of State KW - painting KW - politics KW - South Africa KW - visual arts RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 167 EP - 182 JA - Politikon: (2014), vol.41, no.2, p.167-182. VL - 41 IS - 2 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In May 2012, an artwork on President Zuma caused a public storm about the relationship between freedom of expression, dignity and the rights of the artist. In subsequent political debates on Brett Murray's 'Spear', art and politics met in a heightened clash that embodied all the tensions of a country moving imperfectly towards an imagined state of democracy. In that clash, what was said mattered no less than who said it, and the significance of the debate related to the heart of how democracy ought to be understood. This article argues that the question of where gender equality might feature in South African democracy was less widely debated. More specifically, in the angst that characterized responses to the painting and responses to the responses, considerable anxiety was expressed about two aspects of democracy. The first related to whether or not the liberal political norms of the South African constitution were in danger of being eroded by a socially conservative populist movement. The second related to the sense of citizenship: who belongs in South Africa, who has the right to criticize and who is an authentic citizen. There was little attention to a discussion of what is entailed in the making of the postcolonial subject and especially in the way in which gender complicates modern democracy. The article argues for considering race and gender as inextricable. It suggests that the limits of democracy are most clearly visible when bodies become present in the public sphere. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - Kf;K3 M3 - 381164551 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589346.2013.865824 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 717 T1 - With my head above the parapet : an insider account of the ANC in power A1 - Turok,Ben Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met chronology, index KW - African National Congress (South Africa) KW - government KW - parliament KW - parliamentarians KW - personal narratives (form) KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 219 CY - Auckland Park PB - Jacana Media U2 - w9 SN - 1-431-41041-1 AV - AFRIKA 47997 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 382898982 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 736 T1 - 'Scapegoats' and 'sacred cows' : reactions to the immigrant expulsion of 1983 in Nigeria A1 - Osiki,Omon Merry Y1 - 2013/// KW - 1983 KW - deportation KW - discrimination KW - economic conditions KW - immigrants KW - Nigeria RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 51 EP - 70 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.51-70. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The 1983 mass expulsion of immigrants was ostensibly intended to free Nigeria of 'extra loads' in response to the aftermath of the global economic crunch that bedevilled the country at the time. Although the exercise was challenging enough for the affected African immigrants, the realization that they were treated like cannon fodder and scapegoats while their Asian counterparts, received 'a pat on the back' made their condition more frustrating. This work revisits the debate on the 1983 mass expulsion with focus on public reactions to the seemingly discriminatory, anti-African and un-African posture of the Nigerian authorities in preference for Asian immigrants. It argues that in pursuing the policy of mass expulsion of Africans, the Nigerian authorities jettisoned the principle of 'brotherliness and good neighbourliness' in favour of the law of demand and supply. This dictated what could fairly be described as 'sacred cow' treatment for Asian immigrants. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Fn;C1;C6 M3 - 390734713 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 735 T1 - Alcohol in early Southeastern Nigeria A1 - Okonkwo,Uche Uwaezuoke Y1 - 2013/// KW - alcoholic beverages KW - economic conditions KW - Nigeria KW - social change KW - trade RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 71 EP - 84 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.71-84. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - There exists several misconceptions on the origin of gin distillation and importation in eastern Nigeria.The historical reality is that prior to the coming of Europeans to the coastal region of the area, the only alcohol brand known to the people was palm wine. It was used for various rituals and social gatherings until the Europeans came with assorted alcohol brands. The impact of alcohol, local and imported, on the socio-cultural and economic lives of the people of the area in early Nigeria is discussed in this study. With the coming of the Europeans, new status symbols and changing social relations and new elite power structures developed. From the era of the Trans Atlantic slave trade, the import of gin, rum, and whisky became prevalent. Imported alcohol was used in exchange for slaves and to pay 'comey' (gratification to the chiefs). The exorbitant prices of imported alcohol brands, which was a later development, paved the way for the distillation of alcohol locally. Alcoholic beverages continued to play an important role in international trade and in the economy. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract, edited] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Fn;C1;E7 M3 - 390735531 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 731 T1 - Arts activism, education, and therapies: transforming communities across Africa A1 - Barnes,Hazel Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Met bibliogr., index, noten KW - Africa KW - arts KW - health KW - social change KW - Southern Africa RP - NOT IN FILE PB - Rodopi U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Matatu, ISSN 0932-9714 ; no. 44 N2 - This volume collects a set of essays stemming from research initiated or supported by the Drama for Life programme within the Division of Dramatic Arts at the University of the Witwatersrand, School of Arts (South Africa). The essays focus on arts activism, education and therapies, and explore their potential in transforming African communities, as well as the healing qualities of arts in an African context. The volume also addresses the question of how government and education policies can enhance the role of arts in transforming communities in Africa. The first part 'Arts for social change' contains contributions on: facilitating social change through the visual arts (Kim Berman); theatre as a means to combat violence (Zimbabwe) (Owen Seda and Nehemiah Chivandikwa); addressing inter-generational trauma through dance (Rwanda and Great Lakes Region) (Thogne Niwenshuti); exploring conflict management strategies through applied drama (South Africa) (Kennedy Chinyowa); exploration of an arts-based programme for youth sex offenders (Kristy Errington and others). The second part has contributions on issues concerning arts in Africa and healing: music in everyday life and music as therapy (South Africa, Mercds Pavlicevic); IsiZulu prison theatre: theatre in Westville Correctional Facility in Durban (South Africa) (Christopher John); intervention theatre in Kenya (Christopher Odhiambo Joseph); 'Washa mollo': women's theatre for conversations and healing (South Africa) (Sara Matchett and Makgathi Mokwena); using story to structure a child protection programme (South Africa) (Petro Janse van Vuuren); ethics and politics of narration in 'Elephant', a theatre production involving both British and South African artists (Leigh Nudelman); art counselling with educators (South Africa) (Michelle Booth); musical theatre traditions of the Basarwa in the Ghanzi District (Botswana) (Connie Rapoo); drama as a means of healing for HIV-positive women (South Africa) (Myer Taub). The third part brings together four contributions on applied arts and aesthetics (by Lynn Dalrymple, Emelda Ngofur Samba, Veronica Baxter and Emma Durden). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-90-420-3806-6 geb AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M1 - Ba;K3;G1 M3 - 39097532X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 749 T1 - Bilan de 50 ans des indpendances politiques africaines et les dfis de l'intgration des africains au Canada : histoire, enjeux thiques et perspectives d'avenir pour la renaissance africaine A1 - Mbambi Kungua,Benoit Awazi Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Met noten KW - 2010 KW - Africa KW - Canada KW - child soldiers KW - conference papers (form) KW - education KW - international economic relations KW - NGO KW - war RP - NOT IN FILE PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Afroscopie ; 2013 N2 - Ce numro spcial contient une dizaine de contributions au colloque 'Le bilan de 50 ans des indpendances politiques africaines et les dfis de l'intgration des africains au canada', qui a t organis le 18 dcembre 2010, l'universit d'Ottawa. Titres: 1. Hommage intellectuel Madame Aminata Traor: une figure emblmatique de l'altermondialisation en Afrique subsaharienne (Benot Awazi Mbambi Kungua); 2. Cheikh Anta Diop : l'historien, l'oeuvre et sa rception (Abdoulaye Gueye); 3. L'engagement citoyen des immigrants dans la socit canadienne: le cas de la ville de Gatineau (Mireille Apollon); Le financement public et l'efficacit de laide des ONG : enjeux et dfis (Cheikh Tidiane Diaw); 4. Libye: rflexions sur une guerre (Demba Moussa Dembl); La question des enfants soldats en Cte d'Ivoire (Jean Claude Djrk); De la Chine-Afrique vers Afrique-Chine: ncessit d'une r-articulation paradigmatique entre le continent et les puissances mergentes (Serge Banyongen); et 9. L'ducation en Afrique, o en est-on? (Jean-Paul Mbuya Mutombo). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-2-296-99766-0 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 378070681 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 734 T1 - Britain and the civilizing mission in Nigeria : revisiting anti-malaria policy in Lagos metropolis during the colonial era, 1861-1960 A1 - Alao,Olatunji E. Y1 - 2013/// KW - colonial administration KW - folk medicine KW - health care KW - malaria KW - Nigeria KW - preventive medicine KW - urban areas KW - Yoruba RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 85 EP - 106 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.85-106 : tab. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Malaria, probably the oldest and most endemic human disease, has also received the greatest attention of man, with Africa ever remaining the most vulnerable. The etiology of malaria among the indigenous Yoruba of Lagos before the advent of Western civilization was ascribed to physiological factors; malaria was perceived as 'Blackman's disease'. However, with the advent of European influence, this belief system changed from that of an African to a global disease. Lagos under the British colonial administration between 1861 and 1960, witnessed unprecedented attempts to stem the malaria scourge in the city. By 1960 when Nigeria attained independence, the anti-malaria campaign, though significant, was sectional. The impact of the campaign was felt only in the highbrow areas, essentially at Ikoyi, the seat of power and official quarters of the British colonialists and the European settlers' communities, while the larger part of the city was still ravaged by the disease. Using cultural and modernization theories, this study adopts a historical and descriptive analysis to explain why the effort of the colonial government, though remarkable, failed to achieve the goal of a malaria-free world of the World Health Organization. Nonetheless, the study concludes that the effort of the British colonial government at this period laid a solid foundation for a virile health-care sector for Nigeria and brightened the prospect for a malaria-free Lagos metropolis. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Fn;I1 M3 - 390736740 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 743 T1 - By the rivers of water : a nineteenth-century Atlantic odyssey A1 - Clarke,Erskine Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Met indices, noten KW - biographies (form) KW - Grebo KW - missions KW - Mpongwe KW - Protestant churches KW - slavery KW - travel KW - United States KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - VIII, 450 CY - New York PB - Basic Books U2 - w9 N2 - Part I, Starting places. A slave's world --Many mansions --A Black River home --A place seen from afar. Part II, Journey to a West African cape.Testing the waters --Fair hope among the Grebo --Beneath an African sky --Sorrows and conflicts --The bitter cost of freedom --Exploring strange worlds --The conversion of William Davis (Mworeh Mah) --Rose-tinted glasses --'The liberty of choosing for themselves.' Part III, Life among the Mpongwe.Toko and the waterwitch --A sophisticated, hospitable, and heathen people --Rainforest lessons --The French : 'the most dishonest and shameless people' --Home visit --'He worships with sincere devotion the customs of his ancestors.' Part IV, Homeward journey. An unsought and unexpected appointment --A patriot's choice --Civil war --Home ground --Distant voices SN - 978-0-465-00272-6 AV - AFRIKA 48110 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 385929765 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 738 T1 - Human trafficking in Edo State (Nigeria) : a socio-economic study A1 - Lawal,A.A. Y1 - 2013/// KW - human trafficking KW - Nigeria KW - prostitution KW - sexual offences KW - social environment RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 17 EP - 30 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.17-30. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The essay is derived from a field study executed in 2009. Its focus is on Benin City, a town in Edo State, Nigeria, that is inhabited mostly by the Bini group, although other groups like the Ishan, Etsako, Akoko-Edo, and Owan are also well represented. It is generally believed that Bini girls/women dominate the sex export to Europe through human trafficking. But there are no reliable statistics to validate this assertion as most commentators engage in a blame game. However, the factors that account for human trafficking include the impact of the Nigerian Civil War (1967-1970) and especially the six week occupation of the Bendel State by 'Biafran' soldiers who raped girls and women recklessly. Other factors are the corrupt military regimes (1966-1979, 1984-1998) the socio-economic impact of the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) (1986-1993), early physical and sexual abuse of teenage girls, and the collapse of family values and family honour, due to prevalent polygamy, polyandry, adultery, and prostitution in order to satisfy the inordinate ambition for affluence in society. More factors are the absence of parental role models, parental pressure, peer pressure, and societal pressure to 'go get money regardless of how it is earned' and remit some to build houses, supermarkets and buy custom-made cars. The paper gives the details and recommends some measures for the gradual eradication of human trafficking. It emphasizes that many Christians, Muslims and shrine priests are involved in the business just as the Yoruba, Edo, Igbo, Hausa, etc. serve as agents and traffickers. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Fn;C1 M3 - 390734098 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 733 T1 - International ecumenical community development aid in bad hands : the case of the Bu health centre project of the Presbyterian Church in Cameroon A1 - Lang,Michael Kpughe Y1 - 2013/// KW - Bulu KW - Cameroon KW - community development KW - ecumenism KW - health aid KW - Presbyterian church RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 107 EP - 128 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.107-128. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The Bu Health Centre Project was initiated by the Presbyterian Church in Cameroon (PCC) and the Bu people, and was adequately funded by 'Bread for the World' (BW), a Christian aid organization. It was a community development initiative aimed at improving the health of the Bu people. But the foreign ecumenical health aid, as evidenced by the final phase and attainments of the project, did not result in community development, due to implementation constraints. This paper, based on primary and secondary data, provides evidence of the misuse of foreign ecumenical community development aid, showing that recipient churches engulfed by corrupt practices are more likely to administer such funds improperly. The Bu Health Centre Project in northwest Cameroon is used as a case study to examine the issue. The paper begins with a conceptualization of international ecumenical aid and community development given their importance to the study. This is followed by a theoretical framework embedded in the current aid debate whose insight can shed light on why foreign aid fails to deliver. The paper goes on to discuss PCC-BW partnership in service provision in Cameroon, and pays attention to the PCC's presence in Bu. It further lays bare the genesis and execution of the Bu Health Centre Project, and rounds up with an analytical discourse to understand why the project failed. The study sustains the argument that the failure to transmit the international ecumenical aid set aside for the Bu Health Centre Project into beneficial outcomes rests on the attitude of the donor agency, the recipient institution, as well as the traditional and civil authorities of the recipient community. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Gc;B1;I1 M3 - 390737453 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 741 T1 - Mein Tagebuch : Erfahrungen eines deutschen Missionars in Deutsch-Sdwestafrika 1905-1907 A1 - Spiecker,Johannes A1 - Kopelmann,Lisa A1 - Siefkes,Martin Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 37-38. - Met noten KW - 1900-1909 KW - diaries (form) KW - Germans KW - missions KW - Namibia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 529 CY - Berlin PB - Simon-Verlag fr Bibliothekswissen U2 - w9 SN - 3-940862-41-X AV - AFRIKA 48324 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 388650958 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 740 T1 - My big fat Gupta wedding : cartoons from Mail & Guardian, Sunday Times and The Times A1 - Zapiro Y1 - 2013/// KW - cartoons (form) KW - politics KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 160 CY - Auckland Park PB - Jacana U2 - w9 SN - 1-431-40844-1 AV - AFRIKA 48391 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 388659432 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 737 T1 - Poverty and the travails of the family in late colonial Lagos A1 - Decker,Tunde Y1 - 2013/// KW - colonial administration KW - family KW - juvenile delinquency KW - Nigeria KW - poverty KW - social change KW - social problems RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 31 EP - 50 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.31-50. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This study exposes the responses to poverty and social change by individual and collective consciousness within the family in Lagos, Nigeria, in the first half of the twentieth century. It argues that colonial domination of local Lagos society imposed new poverty and altered individual and collective lifestyles, presenting real life experiences of children, young men, women and the elderly among immigrants and indigenes who lived on the Island of Lagos during the period under consideration. Its conclusions are substantially derived from the analysis of archival records, particularly the handwritten petitions of teenagers and adults to the colonial administration in the 1940s and 1950s. It submits that the new poverty promoted among men, women and children in colonial Lagos had lasting and continuing implications for the family institution in the colonial as well as the post- colonial period. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Fn;C1;C8 M3 - 390734497 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 747 T1 - Rennaissance art, 17th century art in Holland and Spain, 19th century art in France, african art A1 - Tebenkana,Timothy Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 126. - Met gloss KW - Africa KW - art education KW - art history KW - Europe RP - NOT IN FILE EP - VI, 132 CY - [S.l. PB - s.n.] U2 - w9 T3 - Insights into the history of art ; vol. 2 AV - AFRIKA 47953 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383663628 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 732 T1 - Robert Jabea Kum Dibongue : a French Cameroonian in the Pan-Kamerun Movement A1 - Nfi,Joseph Lon Y1 - 2013/// KW - Cameroon KW - colonial policy KW - migration KW - national liberation movements KW - political unification RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 129 EP - 148 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.129-148 : foto. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - After the Second World War, the main issue which the nationalists in British Southern Cameroon debated about concerned the reunification of British and French Cameroon. This article analyses the central role played in this debate by Dibongue, a 'settler' who migrated from French-administered Cameroon. The Pan-Kamerun Movement developed amongst Southern Cameroons' intelligentsia after the Second World War. They believed that the colonial-made division was detrimental to the development of the two territories and opposed the 'balkanization' of Kamerun. They were out to remake German Kamerun, hence their spelling of Cameroon with a 'k'. The paper analyses the causes of migration from the French to the British Cameroons immediately after the indigenes were introduced to different colonial masters and different colonial policies after the departure of the Germans. It also shows how these immigrants were accepted and integrated in the host communities in the British Cameroons and how one of them, Robert Jabea Kum Dibongue, initiated and dominated the Pan-Kamerun Movement. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract, edited] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Gc;D2 M3 - 390772682 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 744 T1 - Starvation and the state : famine, slavery, and power in Sudan, 1883-1956 A1 - Serels,Steven Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [229]-238. - Met gloss., index, noten KW - 1800-1899 KW - 1900-1999 KW - famine KW - food security KW - food supply KW - government policy KW - grain trade KW - Sudan RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XXIV, 253 CY - New York, NY PB - Palgrave Macmillan U2 - w9 T3 - Palgrave series in Indian Ocean world studies N2 - Introduction --Famine and the making of Sudan's northern frontier, 1883-1896 --The Red Sea grain market and British strategy in eastern Sudan and the Red Sea Hills, 1883-1888 --The Sanat Sitta famine in eastern Sudan and the Red Sea Hills and the decline of Bija autonomy, 1889-1904 --Slavery, Anglo-Egyptian rule and the development of the unified Sudanese grain market, 1896-1913 --Cotton and grain as the drivers of economic development, 1913-1940 --Food insecurity and the transition to independence, 1940-1956 --Conclusion. For much of its recent history, Sudan has been beset by devastating famines that have killed countless people and powerfully reshaped its society. However, as this historical study of food insecurity in the region shows, there was no necessary correlation between natural disasters, decreased crop yields, and famine in Sudan. Rather, repeated food crises since the late nineteenth century were the result of inter-generational, exploitative processes that transferred the resources of victim communities to the state and to a small group of non-state elites. This dynamic fundamentally transformed the social, political, and economic structures underpinning Sudanese society and prevented many communities from securing necessary subsistence. On one hand, food crises facilitated the British-led conquest of Sudan and subsequently allowed British imperial agents, acting through the Anglo-Egyptian government, to seize control of many of Sudan's natural resources. At the same time, however, a number of indigenous elites were also able to position themselves so as to further augment their prestige and economic wealth. At independence, these elites were handed control of the state and, in the years that followed, they continued many of the policies that had impoverished their countrymen SN - 978-1-13-738386-0 AV - AFRIKA 48129 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 385929471 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 739 T1 - Strangers, indigenes and child kidnapping in late colonial Lagos A1 - Osifodunrin,Paul Y1 - 2013/// KW - children KW - colonial administration KW - human trafficking KW - kidnapping KW - Nigeria RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 1 EP - 16 JA - Lagos Historical Review: (2013), vol.13, p.1-16. VL - 13 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article, focusing on child kidnapping, examines the involvement of strangers and indigenes in the commission of the offence in late colonial Lagos, Nigeria. The author argues on the basis of written evidence in colonial newspapers and records, that both strangers and indigenes perpetrated the crime. But unlike the offender-indigenes that operated within a protective societal structure that concealed their identity, the strangers, who often acted alone and were not fully integrated into the Lagos society, had no hiding place therefore they were easily identified, reported and prosecuted by the colonial administration. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M1 - Fn;C1 M3 - 39072999X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 745 T1 - The history of blood transfusion in Sub-Saharan Africa A1 - Schneider,William Howard Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 219-233. - Met index, noten KW - AIDS KW - health care KW - medical history KW - risk KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - IX, 239 CY - Athens PB - Ohio University Press U2 - w9 T3 - Perspectives on global health N2 - This study of the practice of blood transfusion in Africa traces the history of one of the most important therapies in modern medicine from the period of colonial rule to independence and the AIDS epidemic. The introduction of transfusion held great promise for improving health, but like most new medical practices, transfusion needed to be adapted to the needs of sub-Saharan Africa, for which there was no analogous treatment in traditional African medicine. This otherwise beneficent medical procedure also created a "royal road" for microorganisms, and thus played a central part in the emergence of human immune viruses in epidemic form. As with more developed health care systems, blood transfusion practices in sub-Saharan Africa were incapable of detecting the emergence of HIV. As a result, given the wide use of transfusion, it became an important pathway for the initial spread of AIDS. Yet African health officials were not without means to understand and respond to the new danger, thanks to forty years of experience and a framework of appreciating long-standing health risks. The response to this risk, detailed in this book, yields important insight into the history of epidemics and HIV/AIDS. Drawing on research from colonial-era governments, European Red Cross societies, independent African governments, and directly from health officers themselves, this book is a historical study of the practice of blood transfusion in Africa." Chapters: Blood transfusion before the Second World War -- Blood transfusion from 1945 to independence -- Blood transfusion in independent African countries -- Who got blood? : indications for the use of blood transfusion, 1945/2000 -- Who gave blood? -- Blood transfusion and health risk before and after the AIDS epidemic -- African blood transfusion in the context of global health. [From back cover and contents] SN - 0-8214-2037-2 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48128 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 385928432 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 748 T1 - The war at home : women and families in the Anglo-Boer War A1 - Nasson,Bill A1 - Grundlingh,Albert M. Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Also available in Afrikaans as: Die oorlog kom huis toe : vroue en gesinne in die Anglo-Boereoorlog Bibliogr.: p. 262-264. - Met index, noten KW - Anglo-Boer wars KW - children KW - concentration camps KW - pictorial works (form) KW - South Africa KW - women RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 272 CY - Cape Town PB - Tafelberg U2 - w9 SN - 0-624-05899-9 AV - AFRIKA A12025 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 382961803 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 742 T1 - Transitional justice for child soldiers : accountability and social reconstruction in post-conflict contexts A1 - Fisher,Kirsten Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 203-223. - Met index, noten KW - Africa KW - child soldiers KW - conflict KW - mental health KW - reintegration KW - transitional justice RP - NOT IN FILE EP - IX, 228 CY - New York, NY PB - Palgrave Macmillan U2 - w9 T3 - Rethinking peace and conflict studies N2 - Child soldiering -- The difficult reintegration -- Moral and legal responsibility of child soldiers -- The expressive value of post-atrocity accountability -- Accountability and social reconstruction -- Trauma, truth-telling, and post-atrocity justice -- Accountability for child soldiers -- Distinctly girl soldiers. Children are recruited to fight in conflicts around the world and violent cruelty characterizes many of the conflicts in which children participate. Some children are perpetrators of some of the worst acts of depraved murder, disfigurement, and terrorism imaginable. They then struggle to reintegrate into communities that were victims of the violence. Taking into account the interests of children and other victims of conflict, and considering the needs of post-conflict communities, this book examines and offers suggestions for how transitional justice practices should conceptualize and address the involvement of child soldiers in violent collective harm. This book will appeal to a wide range of scholars from International Relations, Criminal Justice, Law, Philosophy, Sociology, Anthropology, Development and African Studies SN - 978-1-13-703049-8 AV - AFRIKA 48276 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 387603107 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 746 T1 - U.A.C.E arts : history, economics, IRE & CRE : 1999 - 2013 Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Omslagtitel KW - Christian education KW - economics education KW - examinations KW - history education KW - Islamic education KW - religious education KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 481 CY - [Kampala] PB - UNEB U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47954 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383665884 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 754 T1 - "A free public library" in Freetown at the turn of the twentieth century: an interesting piece from the Sierra Leone press A1 - Goerg,Odile Y1 - 2012/// KW - gender discrimination KW - Krio KW - public libraries KW - Sierra Leone RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 9 EP - 23, tab JA - Mande Studies: (2012), no.14, p.9-23, tab.. IS - 14 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In 1906, an article was published in the Sierra Leone Weekly News (SLWN) which was entitled: 'A free public library.' This article is used here to address questions of literacy, the reading community, the purpose of education in Freetown, and the meaning of reading in Sierra Leone at the beginning of the twentieth century. In 1906, a free public library was opened in the house of the late Benjamin Brown at 15 Howe Street, in the centre of Freetown. According to SLWN it was formally opened on the 1st of August. The funding had been provided by the Hon. James Jonathan Thomas, a wealthy member of the Wesleyan Church and an eminent member of the Krio community. The reading public was to be formed by young men. Women were not allowed in the reading room in Freetown. However, a lending service was organized for them specifically. App., notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fp;A4 M3 - 390865192 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 769 T1 - A directory of the Ninth Parliament of Uganda : 2011-2016 Y1 - 2012/// KW - directories (form) KW - parliament KW - parliamentarians KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIII, 216 CY - Kampala PB - Parliament of the Republic of Uganda U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 48017 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 383995086 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 760 T1 - A reassessment of military justice as a separate system in the administration of justice: the case of Uganda A1 - Naluwairo,Ronald Y1 - 2012/// KW - administration of justice KW - military law KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 136 EP - 151 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.136-151. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article critically analyses the reasons advanced to justify military justice as a separate system within the administration of justice and examines the validity of these reasons in Uganda's situation. The article addresses the question of whether military justice is justice, and highlights the minimum preconditions for making the administration of military justice fair and just. The system of military justice deals with military offences such as disobedience, desertion, cowardice in action, mutiny, and insubordination. It serves to enforce discipline and good order in the army. Nowadays, civilian authority and control of the military, including the administration of justice, is a cherished principle of democracy. The main reasons for maintaining military justice as a distinct system in the administration of justice are: 1. the unique and specialized nature of military service; 2. the need for speedy trials; 3. flexibility in the administration of justice; 4. uncertainties in the civilian justice system; and 5. enforcement of military discipline. In the case of Uganda, some of these reasons advanced are not convincing. It is emphasized that whatever the justifications, military justice should conform to the minimum international human rights standards for administering justice, particularly those embedded in the right to a fair trial. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Hf;F1 M3 - 390810428 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 758 T1 - Africa and the International Criminal Court A1 - Ogunfolu,Adedokun A1 - Assim,Maria Y1 - 2012/// KW - Africa KW - International Criminal Court KW - international law KW - offences against human rights RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 100 EP - 115 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.100-115. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Since the establishment of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in 2002, its work has generated a lot of debate, criticism and controversy. This is largely due to the perception that the ICC seems to be functioning most actively against human rights atrocities in African states, while situations in other regions of the world receive much less attention. Nevertheless, the ICC has made major contributions to the development of International Law generally and International Humanitarian Law in particular, especially in the context of genocide and crimes against humanity such as systemic rape. A number of cases before the ICC has emanated from Africa, including cases from Libya (Gadaffi), Sudan (Al Bashir), the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda (the Lord's Resistance Army), Cte d'Ivoire (Gbagbo), and Kenya. Some of the non-African cases that are being investigated include Afghanistan, Colombia, Georgia, Honduras, and Korea. The governments of the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda referred situations in their countries to the ICC. Until violent conflicts are eliminated in Africa, the ICC will continue to pursue more cases as they fall within its mandate. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Ba;F2 M3 - 390812889 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 776 T1 - Beyond 'malaya' or prostitute : interrogating sexual and reproductive health rights of young female sex workers in the context of HIV/AIDS in Uganda A1 - Twinomugisha,Ben Kiromba Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 63-71. - Met noten, samenvatting KW - access to health care KW - prostitution KW - social and economic rights KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE EP - IV, 71 CY - Kampala PB - Human Rights and Peace Centre (HURIPEC), Faculty of Law, Makerere University U2 - w9 T3 - HURIPEC working paper ; no. 37 SN - 9970-51141-6 AV - AFRIKA 47573 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 381057631 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 770 T1 - Champions of the centuries : profile of eminent people from Ghana's Brong-Ahafo Region A1 - Anane-Agyei,Nana Agyei-Kodie Y1 - 2012/// KW - Abron KW - Abron polity KW - Ahafo polity KW - biographical dictionaries (form) KW - Ghana RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XVI, 233 CY - Accra PB - Abibrem Communications U2 - w9 SN - 9988-16922-1 AV - AFRIKA 47964 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383688655 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 757 T1 - Developing nations: renegotiating women's relevance through emotional stability A1 - Nkemakonam,Chinwuba N. Y1 - 2012/// KW - Africa KW - empowerment KW - gender relations KW - legislation KW - sex education KW - sexuality KW - women's rights RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 86 EP - 99 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.86-99. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article analyses the role of the law in regulating sexual relationships between men and women in African countries against the backdrop of the well-being of the parties, particularly the victim in such relationships, who is usually the woman. The author shows that the law has been fully explored and engaged as a vital tool in determining the boundaries of mischief in light of the need for a paradigm shift towards respect of the rights to self-determination as well as a realization of innate potential and competencies that are essential in development. In order to achieve this change in paradigm, she advocates an articulated study of the issue on a broad policy basis that may encompass a reorientation of gender stereotyping in early school curricula aimed at sex education and the promotion of constructive and harmonious male/female relations. Holding men accountable for the expression of their libido would go a long way in obviating the present ills perpetuated against women, particularly in developing nations, such as emotional upheaval, trafficking, lack of political empowerment, cohabitation and desertion. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Ba;C1 M3 - 39081380X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 750 T1 - Diplomatic manoeuvres in the creation of the United Nations Human Rights Council A1 - Ogwezzy,Michael C. Y1 - 2012/// KW - Africa KW - diplomacy KW - human rights institutions KW - UN KW - world RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 18 EP - 35 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.18-35. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The United Nations Human Rights Commission (the Commission) was the primary intergovernmental policymaking body responsible for promoting human rights issues before it was replaced by the UN Human Rights Council (the HRC) in 2006. It was the Commission that drafted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which was adopted by the UN General Assembly on December 10, 1948. During its tenure, the Commission developed a system of special procedures to monitor, analyse and report on human rights violations. The procedures addressed country-specific human rights violations, as well as thematic human rights abuses such as racial discrimination, religious intolerance, and the denial of freedom of expression. Since 1998, controversy developed over the election of certain Commission members. Sudan, which was broadly criticized for ethnic cleansing in Darfur, was elected in 2001 and re-elected in 2004. Accusations of bloc voting and procedural manipulation led to dissolution of the Commission and creation of the HRC in its place. The HRC, in operation since June 2006, is supposed to address the shortcomings of the Commission with a slightly more rigorous election procedure and a Universal Periodic Review of the human rights records of all UN member states. The HRC is composed of 47 members apportioned by geographic region. Council members are directly elected by the UN General Assembly. Detailed analysis shows that the UN hierarchy and the Swiss Government Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) have been instrumental in creating the new HRC. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Ba;D4 M3 - 39087308X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 765 T1 - Environmental protection, conflict, and the law A1 - Raza,Saima Y1 - 2012/// KW - environmental degradation KW - environmental law KW - international law KW - war KW - world RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 36 EP - 61 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.36-61. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article explains the need for environmental protection, especially in light of future forecasts, and briefly examines case studies from Sierra Leone, Afghanistan, Iraq, Vietnam, Kosovo and Kuwait to highlight the cost of war on the environment. It investigates the extent to which International Law affords environmental protection during armed conflict and explores avenues for redress in case of climate change harm. Some protection is guaranteed under: (1) international environmental law such as the Stockholm Declaration on the Human Environment; (2) the Hague Convention; (3) the Geneva Convention; (4) international humanitarian law; (5) the Environmental Modification Convention; and (6) the 1977 Protocol I Additional to the 1949 Geneva Conventions. Soft law instruments include: (7) the Martens Clause; (8) Protocol III annexed to the Convention on Conventional Weapons; (9) the Chemical Weapons Convention; (10) the Convention on the Law of the Sea; (11) the Nuclear Test Case at the International Court of Justice; and (12) the International Criminal Court. The article emphasizes the need to strengthen the existing legal provisions or construct new laws and institutions to oversee compensation and protection. The study concludes by emphasizing the impending environmental challenges humanity will face in the coming decades and the role of law as a protection framework despite its fragmented state and structural bias. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Ba;F2 M3 - 390794449 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 756 T1 - Female circumcision in Muslim and non-Muslim African communities: ideology, practice, and prevention A1 - Morgen,A.J. Y1 - 2012/// KW - Africa KW - female circumcision KW - human rights KW - Islamic countries KW - traditions RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 62 EP - 85 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.62-85. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article evaluates the ideological and procedural differences and, when appropriate, commonalities of female circumcision (FC) in Muslim and non-Muslim communities in Africa. It also considers the way in which these differences determine the efficacy of outreach, advocacy, and preventative initiatives. Previously, efforts to eradicate female genital mutilation (FGM) have been ineffectual by applying a uniformed plan of action across all practicing communities. Human rights defenders need to understand that supporters of FC are not 'bad' people. They are trying to help their young females lead a successful life by making them culturally marriageable or ensuring they follow a perceived religious mandate. By previously stigmatizing the procedure and its supporters, activists have done themselves a great disservice by essentially closing lines of communication with the very people they are trying to educate. Recent successes in lowering the rates of FC in North Africa indicate that this damage is not irreparable and that if human rights defenders approach their work with cultural understanding and strategies specifically designed for the community of people with whom they are working, there is hope for eradicating female circumcision in all the African Muslim and non-Muslim communities alike. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract, edited] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Ba;C4 M3 - 39081489X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 763 T1 - Gender, sexual reproductive health and the law in Nigeria A1 - Ashiru,M.O.A. A1 - Opadere,Olaolu S. Y1 - 2012/// KW - abortion KW - children's rights KW - female circumcision KW - legislation KW - marriage law KW - Nigeria KW - reproductive health KW - women's health KW - women's rights RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 202 EP - 226 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.202-226. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The rights of Nigerian women to sexual and reproductive health, particularly during their reproductive years, are examined in relation to gender-biased, cultural and traditional beliefs pertaining to child marriage, female circumcision, unwanted pregnancies, and abortion. The authors also consider existing international and regional laws on reproductive health, and the way in which Nigeria has adopted these laws with a view to meeting relevant Millennium Development Goals. It is concluded that: (1) there is an urgent need for all States of the Nigerian federation to adopt the Child's Rights Act (2003), without amending the age at which a child attains majority (set at 18 years in the said act); (2) female genital mutilation must be stopped; (3) abortion is liberalized to allow unwanted pregnancies to be ended if so desired. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fn;C4 M3 - 390799866 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 767 T1 - Jammeh, President Jammeh's moving legacy A1 - Jallow,Musa E. A1 - Bojang$,Fansu Y1 - 2012/// KW - country studies (form) KW - development KW - Gambia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - VII, 162 CY - Serekunda PB - Exodus Publishers U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 48187 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 387381694 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 768 T1 - Namibia's coast : ocean riches and desert treasures A1 - Robertson,Tony Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 182-187. - Met gloss KW - Namibia KW - natural history KW - pictorial works (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 192 CY - Windhoek PB - Directorate of Environmental Affairs, Ministry of Environment and Tourism U2 - w9 SN - 99945-0016-3 AV - AFRIKA 48018 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 383995485 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 774 T1 - Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa A1 - Nyangena,Wilfred Y1 - 2012/// N1 - An AERC Publication"-- Cover Contributions to a conference held in September 2008 to commemorate AERC's 20th anniversary Met bibliogr., noten KW - 2008 KW - climate change KW - conference papers (form) KW - natural resource management KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 3 CY - Nairobi PB - Moran (E.A) Publishers Limited U1 - Aanwezig: deel 1-3. U2 - w9 SN - 978-9966-34589-9 (vol. 1) AV - AFRIKA 47932.1-3 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383428505 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 773 T1 - Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa / Wilfred Nyangena 1: Conference Plenary Papers A1 - Nyangena,Wilfred Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - 2008 KW - climate change KW - conference papers (form) KW - natural resource management KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 139 CY - Nairobi PB - Moran (E.A) Publishers Limited U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This volume is the first of three volumes that collect papers presented at a regional conference on 'Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa' organized in September 2008 in commemoraton of the 20th anniversary of the African Economic Consortium (AERC). It contains the conference's plenary papers: Managing the exploitation of natural assets: lessons for low-income countries (Paul Collier and Anthony J. Venables); Managing resource revenue: lessons for low-income countries (Paul Collier and Anthony J. Venables); Regional aspects of global climate change and its interaction with economic development in Sub-Saharan Africa (Richard Samson Odingo); Rowing against the current: the diversification challenge in Africa's resource-rich economies (John Page); How theory meets practice: political economy models of the resourse curse and current donor initiatives (Ivar Kolstad and Arne Wiig). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 9966-34589-2 pbk AV - AFRIKA 47932.1 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 383428602 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 772 T1 - Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa / Wilfred Nyangena 2: Natural Resources A1 - Nyangena,Wilfred Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - 2008 KW - conference papers (form) KW - energy resources KW - forest management KW - natural resource management KW - Subsaharan Africa KW - sustainable development RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIX, 278 CY - Nairobi PB - Moran (E.A) Publishers Limited U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This volume with 16 chapters on natural resources is the second of three volumes that collect papers presented at a regional conference on 'Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa' organized in September 2008 in commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the African Economic Consortium (AERC). Issues addressed include: rural livelihood transformation and poverty reduction in Uganda; impact of agricultural water management technologies on poverty in Ethiopia; optimal oil depletion in Ghana; monetary assessment of benefits of ecosystem preservation: an application of the contingent valuation method to Lake Chad; rural household dependence on forest income in Zambia; biofuels, poverty and growth: a computable general equilibrium analysis of Mozambique; viability of small-scale wind turbines in South Africa; property right market and illegal hunting in Campo-Ma'an National Park, Cameroon; agriculture, population and deforestation in Cte d'Ivoire; a possible regulatory environment for the private production of electricity in South Africa; cost-benefit analysis of conserving the Kakamega rainforest in Kenya; sustainable management of natural resources and energy demand behaviour in Camreoon; joint forest management in Zambia; effects of trade and growth on air pollution in Sub-Saharan Africa. [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-9966-34588-2 pbk AV - AFRIKA 47932.2 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 38342867X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 771 T1 - Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa / Wilfred Nyangena 3: Climate Change A1 - Nyangena,Wilfred Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - 2008 KW - agricultural production KW - climate change KW - conference papers (form) KW - risk KW - small farms KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XV, 387 CY - Nairobi PB - Moran (E.A) Publishers Limited U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This volume on climate change is the last of three volumes that collect papers presented at a regional conference on 'Natural resource management and climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa' organized in September 2008 in commemoraton of the 20th anniversary of the African Economic Consortium (AERC). This volume has 19 chapters dealing with climate change and climate change impacts in various African countries. Issues addressed include: water security in rural areas in Cte d'Ivoire; an econometric analysis of the relationship between environmental conservation, the labour market and the output market in western Kenya; the costs of health impacts of climate change; adaptation options of Kenyan farming households; resource mobilization in agrarian households in Cameroon; implications for food security and poverty reduction in Lesotho; implications for sustainable food crop production in Nigeria; farming households' vulnerability in Nigeria's Niger Delta; climate change: a threat or an opportunity for Africa?; maize farming: productivity in Cameroon; climate change and economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa; financial innovation and reinsurance; climate risk insurance; the Subtropical Thicket Restoration Project, Eastern Cape, South Africa; agricultural intensification in Southwest Nigeria; irrigation and farm income in Africa; modelling climate change and agricultural production in Sub-Saharan Africa; community forest exploitation in the Lomi Region, Cameroon. [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-9966-34586-8 pbk AV - AFRIKA 47932.3 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 383428742 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 752 T1 - Out on Malian television: media and culture change in an emerging cosmopolitan metropolitan center A1 - Hoffman,Barbara G. Y1 - 2012/// KW - capitals KW - cultural change KW - Mali KW - television KW - urban life RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 127 EP - 148 JA - Mande Studies: (2012), no.14, p.127-148. IS - 14 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In 2011, the author conducted a public opinion study with regard to two Malian television series, both located in Bamako: 'Dou' or 'Family', produced by Boubacar Sidib, and 'Le Grin', written and directed by Ousmane Sow. In these series, televised representations of the inhabitants of metropolitan Bamako perform cosmopolitan lifestyles in markedly local idioms. There was a substantial generation gap in the responses to these two local television productions. This gap is indicative of the process of cosmopolitanization of the citizens of Bamako. The older generations tend to resist or adapt more slowly, while the younger ones leap onto the modernization bandwagon with alacrity. These outcomes raise new questions that remain to be answered. What has been the impact on these cosmopolitan trends of the year of crisis that Mali endured during 2012-2013? How are the increasingly conservative religious practices of the 'citadins' affecting what is produced for television? Bibliogr., notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fk;K3 M3 - 390865214 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 753 T1 - Politics of ethnicity in Monrovia, Liberia and Kankan, Guinea: a comparative analysis A1 - Ammann,Carole A1 - Kaufmann,Andrea Y1 - 2012/// KW - elections KW - ethnic conflicts KW - ethnicity KW - Fulani KW - Guinea KW - Liberia KW - Manding KW - politics RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 57 EP - 97 JA - Mande Studies: (2012), no.14, p.57-97. IS - 14 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article analyses discursive formations of ethnicity, narratives of unity and reconciliation, and lived realities by comparing the current situation in Monrovia, Liberia with that in Kankan, Guinea. It addresses the historical, political and social circumstances that influence the emergence and existence of ethnic tensions, and the changes therein. Western media often portray conflicts in Africa in an ethnic light. This, however, is a shallow approach, which does not facilitate understanding the problem in its complexity. It is shown that in most instances of everyday life, ethnic identity does not play a pivotal role, as social actors interact habitually with one another. Yet, ethnicity is widely used in an interpretive pattern. It forms part of the interaction between political leaders and the population and it is an issue between different groups within society. Ethnicity is often emphasized in times of parliamentary or presidential elections, which increases the risk of violence. This problem is not unique to Guinea and Liberia. In Liberia, President Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia avoided addressing ethnic issues in her speeches in order to prevent tensions from building with the Manding, who are Muslim. President Alpha Cond of Guinea, however, made explicit use of ethnic cleavages between the Manding and Fulani. Of course, both presidents are aware of the need for reconciliation, but their approaches towards the issue differ significantly. Bibliogr., notes, ref. [ASC Leidenabstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fg;Fj;D2 M3 - 390865206 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 751 T1 - Ritualizing and domesticating space: 'kaeleng' women coping with childlessness in the Gambia A1 - Saho,Bala Y1 - 2012/// KW - Gambia KW - infertility KW - initiation KW - rituals KW - women KW - women's organizations RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 99 EP - 125 JA - Mande Studies: (2012), no.14, p.99-125. IS - 14 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This study examines how kaeleng (or childless) women in the Gambia cope with the challenges of childlessness and come to appropriate, domesticate, and own particular spaces. The emphasis is on traditional processes and mechanisms such as visiting a marabout or a shrine or going through a ritual that initiates the women to kaeleng associations. A kaeleng is a woman who cannot bear children or whose children die at an early age. Compared with visiting a hospital or clinic, the traditional approaches are not only more affordable, but the rituals also produce a strong sense of cultural empowerment by giving the women a chance to reconstruct their identities and lives. The rites confirm not only the pragmatic utility of the rituals in transforming the aspirant from a childless woman to a fertile woman, but also elevate the status of the specific landscape on which 'the rite of passage' is conducted to attain sacred status or confirm the sacrality of the place. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract, edited] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fe;H0 M3 - 390868612 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 759 T1 - Subordination and exploitation of girls and women in Uganda: who is absconding their responsibility? A1 - Kasente,Deborah A1 - Busingye,Winifred A1 - Mugarura,Edward Y1 - 2012/// KW - access to education KW - gender inequality KW - girls KW - social and economic rights KW - Uganda KW - women KW - women's rights RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 116 EP - 135 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.116-135. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Between 2008 and 2012 a longitudinal study and several gender-based studies were conducted in seven districts of rural Uganda to explore the linkages between gender, age, social institutions, geographic location and the subordination and exploitation of women (SEW). Three categories of women were distinguished: school-going girls (school drop-outs), adult women (low participation in decision-making, even where it concerns water supply), and entrepreneur women (economic dependence on men). The authors demonstrate that within the larger community of women, young and adolescent girls were the most vulnerable to subordination and sexual exploitation, while married women, especially those located in remote rural areas, were disproportionately vulnerable to exploitation and discrimination. The authors recommend that all duty bearers, including parents, civil society players and the state, must pay special attention to break the cycle of SEW. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract, edited] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Hf;C4 M3 - 390811467 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 755 T1 - The encounter of Islam and the Bamana Km: "Km-ization" of Islam or Islamization of Km? A1 - Kone,Kassim Y1 - 2012/// KW - acculturation KW - African religions KW - Bambara KW - Islam KW - Mali KW - secret societies RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 25 EP - 56 JA - Mande Studies: (2012), no.14, p.25-56. IS - 14 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article discusses the encounter of Islam and Bamana religious forms and the ensuing and sustained social and cultural transformations that have taken place in the Bldugu region in Central-Western Mali since the early 20th century. The term Bamana can refer to ethnic, linguistic and religious communities depending on the context. Before widespread conversion to Islam, the Km secret fraternity was the most popular religious association among the Bamana and other Mande groups. It supervised judicial, defence and economic matters. A direct encounter was prevented for centuries after Islam had arrived in the Western Sudan and was only made possible by the domino effect caused by French colonialism. The encounter has brought about bricolage and intertextuality to reconcile the two religious beliefs and practices. This bricolage must not be understood as confusion, but as a pragmatic, synthetic compromise. A major consequence has been the erosion of the social roles of the blacksmiths, who suddenly found themselves competing with Islamic clerics for religious and spiritual leadership. Bibliogr., notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fk;B1 M3 - 390864153 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 761 T1 - The right to defence counsel in criminal proceedings in Ethiopia A1 - Manahle,Gizachew A. Y1 - 2012/// KW - administration of justice KW - criminal procedure KW - Ethiopians KW - legal aid KW - rights of the accused RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 152 EP - 176 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.152-176. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article seeks to assess the availability of the right to an effective defence counsel under the Ethiopian legal system, identify the legal and practical problems in respect to this right, and consider whether Ethiopia has lived up to regional and international human rights standards and commitments. It also examines the way this right is understood by human rights monitoring organs. The effort on part of the government of Ethiopia to establish public defenders offices (PDO's) demonstrates its desire to ensure the actual provision of legal aid. However, the Federal PDO is not independent and lacks adequate resources. No strong PDO's have been established at the level of regional states, whereas they should be established as independent entities directly by federal and states legislative organs. PDO's should be recognized as equal partners with the public prosecution offices. It is also vital for the government to realize the possible contributions of other stakeholders such as the lawyers' bar associations, civil society organizations and non-governmental organizations. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Dd;F1 M3 - 390805084 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 762 T1 - The role of Eritrea's diaspora in regional peace and human rights A1 - Weldehaimanot,Simon M. Y1 - 2012/// KW - diasporas KW - Eritrea KW - one-party systems KW - political repression KW - remittances KW - war RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 177 EP - 201 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.177-201. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The author explores the role Eritrea's diaspora has been playing in promoting democracy, peace and human rights in their country and in the Horn of Africa. Thirty years of conflict in Eritrea (1961-1991) and famine forced almost a million Eritreans to seek asylum in neighbouring and western countries. While in the diaspora, this community supported Eritrea's independence struggle led then by a charismatic front and continues to do so. However, the front has become the worst oppressor of its people, leading to massive outmigration again. Eritrea's diaspora could have forced the government to protect human rights by making support conditional to the establishment of democracy, but unawareness, nostalgia, timidity, gross apathy and sheer opportunism has made this community play a negative role, thereby betraying the safe haven accorded by neighbouring countries and western democracies. Border conflicts with Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Sudan depended to some extent on contributions from Eritreans abroad. Some diaspora Eritreans should not be allowed to claim persecution on the one hand and continue supporting their persecutor on the other. Eritrea has become an African version of North Korea. Since 2009, it faces sanctions from the UN Security Council. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract, edited] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Dh;D1 M3 - 390800686 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 775 T1 - They answered the call : Nyasa-Bangweolo vicariates A1 - Spaita,James Mwewa Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 108 KW - autobiographies (form) KW - bishops KW - Catholic Church KW - Malawi KW - missionary history KW - missions KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - II, 115 CY - Kasama PB - Kalebalika Audio Visual Systems U2 - w9 SN - 9982-22372-0 AV - AFRIKA 47870 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 38278362X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 764 T1 - Women's rights as the missing link in poverty eradication in Nigeria A1 - Akanle,Olayinka A1 - Olutayo ,A.O. Y1 - 2012/// KW - development projects KW - gender inequality KW - Nigeria KW - poverty reduction KW - women's employment KW - women's rights RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 227 EP - 241 JA - East African Journal of Peace & Human Rights: (2012), vol.18, no.1, p.227-241. VL - 18 IS - 1 U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The challenges posed by gender trajectories of interventions aimed at poverty eradication are examined using the case of the National Poverty Eradication Programme (NAPEP), which was established by the Federal Government of Nigeria in 2001 as the overall agency to coordinate and monitor all poverty eradication efforts in the country, including the Capacity Acquisition Programme (CAP), the Farmers Empowerment Programme (FEP), and the Micro Finance Coordination Programme. Nigeria is ranked 158 out of 177 countries on the Human Development Index. The contrast between policy goals and outcomes has been variously traced to corruption, elitist programming, lack of proper coordination, evaluation and monitoring, loan defaulting, politicization, policy inconsistency, the lack of participation of women, and the lack of laws ensuring women's rights or their effective implementation. This can partly be blamed on patriarchy and colonialism. Without attitudinal change, policy interfacing, and effective advocacy the situation of women will not change. Women are underrepresented in formal employment. Gender-disaggregated data will be necessary to enhance accountability and transparency in the promotion of female participation at all levels. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/02/26/ M1 - Fn;C4 M3 - 390798525 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 781 T1 - Christians by grace - baptists by choice : a history of the Baptist Convention of Malawi A1 - Longwe,Hany Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 505-520. - Met index, noten KW - Baptist Church KW - Christianity KW - Malawi RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 532 CY - Zomba [etc.] PB - Mzuni Press U2 - w9 T3 - Kachere theses ; no. 19 Mzuni books ; no. 3 SN - 99908-8779-9 (Kachere) AV - AFRIKA 47899 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 382894650 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 780 T1 - Visual century - South African art in context 1907-2007 / Gavin Jantjes Vol. 1: : 1907-1948 A1 - Jantjes,Gavin A1 - Carman,Jillian Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met bibliogr., chronology, index, noten KW - art history KW - decorative arts KW - pictorial works (form) KW - South Africa KW - visual arts RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 220 CY - Johannesburg PB - Wits University Press U2 - w9 SN - 978-1-86814-524-9 AV - AFRIKA A12008.1 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 387128573 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 779 T1 - Visual century - South African art in context 1907-2007 / Gavin Jantjes Vol. 2: : 1907-1948 A1 - Jantjes,Gavin A1 - Robbroeck,Lize van Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met bibliogr., chronology, index, noten KW - art history KW - decorative arts KW - pictorial works (form) KW - South Africa KW - visual arts RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 217 CY - Johannesburg PB - Wits University Press U2 - w9 SN - 978-1-86814-525-6 AV - AFRIKA A12008.2 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 387128956 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 778 T1 - Visual century - South African art in context 1907-2007 / Gavin Jantjes Vol. 3: : 1973-1992 A1 - Jantjes,Gavin A1 - Pissara,Mario Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met bibliogr., chronology, index, noten KW - art history KW - decorative arts KW - pictorial works (form) KW - South Africa KW - visual arts RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 232 CY - Johannesburg PB - Wits University Press U2 - w9 SN - 978-1-86814-526-3 AV - AFRIKA A12008.3 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 387129049 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 777 T1 - Visual century - South African art in context 1907-2007 / Gavin Jantjes Vol. 4: : 1990-2007 A1 - Jantjes,Gavin A1 - Pissara,Mario A1 - Goniwe,Thembinkosi A1 - Majavu,Mandisi Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met bibliogr., chronology, index, noten KW - art history KW - decorative arts KW - pictorial works (form) KW - South Africa KW - visual arts RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 222 CY - Johannesburg PB - Wits University Press U2 - w9 SN - 978-1-86814-527-0 AV - AFRIKA A12008.4 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 387129154 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 782 T1 - A vida do casal Pachinuapa A1 - Pachinuapa,Raimundo A1 - Manguedye,Marina Y1 - 2009/// N1 - Met noot KW - Mozambique KW - national liberation struggles KW - personal narratives (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 95 CY - Maputo PB - JV Editores U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47533 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 380700212 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 783 T1 - Colectnea de legislao constitucional A1 - Carrilho,Jos Norberto Y1 - 2009/// KW - 2004 KW - constitutional law KW - constitutions KW - legislation KW - local government KW - Mozambique KW - political participation RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 701 CY - Maputo PB - Centro de Formao Jurdica e Judiciria, Ministrio da Justia U2 - w9 T3 - Colectneas de legislao ; 15 AV - AFRIKA 47529 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 380697459 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 784 T1 - II Congresso da Frente de Libertao de Moambique (FRELIMO) : 40o aniversrio : memrias A1 - Pachinuapa,Raimundo Domingos Y1 - 2009/// N1 - Met noten KW - 1968 KW - conferences KW - Frelimo KW - memorial volumes (form) KW - Mozambique RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 148 CY - Maputo PB - R.D. Pachinuapa U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47527 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 380694182 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 785 T1 - History teaching syllabus : Uganda certificate of education: senior 1- 4 Y1 - 2008/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 142 KW - curriculum KW - history education KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE EP - IX, 142 CY - Kampala PB - National Curriculum Development Centre (NCDC) U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47955 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383666678 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 786 T1 - Sector plan for science, technology and innovation, 2008-2012 Y1 - 2008/// N1 - Met bijl KW - development plans KW - innovations KW - Kenya KW - science and technology RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIV, 85 CY - Nairobi PB - Office of the Prime Minister, Ministry of State for Planning, National Development, and Vision 2030 U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47931 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383427231 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 787 T1 - Youth and leadership : an intentional listening process Y1 - 2007/// N1 - A study funded by Sida Civil Society Centre Bibliogr.: p. 51. - Met noten KW - attitudes KW - Kenya KW - leadership KW - youth RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 59 CY - Nairobi PB - CORAT Africa U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47965 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 383688728 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 788 T1 - Sortir de la pauvret : la rvolution du bon sens au Congo A1 - Mumengi,Didier Y1 - 2006/// N1 - Met noten KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - development KW - economic conditions KW - poverty reduction RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 243 CY - Paris [etc.] PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w9 T3 - Espace Kinshasa SN - 2-296-01703-7 AV - AFRIKA 47985 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 312972172 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 789 T1 - Sur la route de la libert A1 - Koulibaly,Mamadou Y1 - 2004/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 285-286. - Met noten KW - Cte d'Ivoire KW - democratization KW - France KW - international relations KW - political conditions RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 288 CY - Paris [etc.] PB - L'Harmattan [etc.] U2 - w9 SN - 2-7475-7347-8 AV - AFRIKA 47979 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 278685420 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 790 T1 - Being Mandinga, being Muslim : transnational debates on personhood and religious identity in Guinea-Bissau and Portugal A1 - Johnson,Michelle Cecilia Y1 - 2003/// N1 - Doctoral dissertation University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2002 Bibliogr.: p. 360-379. - Met bijl., gloss., noten, samenvatting KW - Guinea-Bissau KW - immigrants KW - Islam KW - Manding KW - Portugal RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIV, 380 CY - Ann Arbor, MI PB - UMI U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 47857 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 313483248 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 791 T1 - South Africa and the non-aligned movement : agenda for the twenty-first century A1 - Jha,Uma Shankar Y1 - 2001/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [182]-186. - Met bijl KW - development KW - nonalignment KW - political history KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIV, 186 CY - Delhi PB - Association of Indian Africanist U2 - w9 SN - 81-8784800-6 AV - AFRIKA 47981 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 21559729X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 792 T1 - Warriors, leaders, sages, and outcasts in the Namibian past : narratives collected from Herero sources for the Michael Scott Oral Records Project (MSORP) 1985-6 A1 - Heywood,Annemarie A1 - Lau,Brigitte A1 - Ohly,Rajmund Y1 - 1992/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 222-223. - Met noten KW - biographies (form) KW - Herero KW - Namibia KW - oral history RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 223 CY - Windhoek PB - MSORP U2 - w9 N2 - Table of contents: The war between the Nama and Herero / narrated by A. Kaputu -- The Maharero family / narrated by A. Kaputu -- Mureti of Kaupangua / narrated by A. Kaputu -- Tjamuaha / narrated by A. Kaputu -- Mbaha / narrated by A. Kaputu -- Kukuri / narrated by A. Kaputu -- Kahimemua / narrated by Kenapeta Tjatindi to G. Mupaine -- Herero clans and customs / narrated by Willy Njanekua and/or Kasisanda Muuondjo, to G. Mupaine -- Kambazembi / narrated by Pastor Muuondjo to G. Mupaine -- Tjiponda, Kahivesa, and the wars of the Herero / narrated by Willy Njanekua and Kasisanda Muuondjo to G. Mupaine -- Manasse Veseeveta on his youth and Vita Harunga / narrated to A. Kaputu -- Borders, Kambazembi, Maharero / narrated by Nicolas Tuvahi to R. Hijarunguru SN - 0-86976-250-8 AV - AFRIKA 47720 Y2 - 2015/02/23/ M3 - 381332802 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 795 T1 - Afrika : Entdeckung und Erforschung eines Kontinents A1 - Duchhardt,Heinz A1 - Schlumberger,Jrg A. A1 - Segl,Peter Y1 - 1989/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - 1988 KW - Africa KW - conference papers (form) KW - expeditions KW - history RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 195 CY - Kln [etc.] PB - Bhlau Verlag U2 - w9 T3 - Bayreuther historische Kolloquien ; Band 3 SN - 3-412-13088-5 AV - AFRIKA 47715 Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M3 - 085934259 ER - TY - JFULL ID - 794 T1 - Current writing : text and reception in Southern Africa Current writing : text and reception in Southern Africa, ISSN 2159-9130 Y1 - 1989/// N1 - Met ingang van 1993 verschijningsfrequentie gewijzigd Verschijnt 2x per jaar KW - literature KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Current writing : text and reception in Southern Africa U2 - Vol. 1 (Oct. 1989) - ... w9 SN - 1013-929X AV - AFRIKA J-6/Lz Y2 - 2015/02/25/ M1 - (68);896;Kf;Ma M3 - 087484579 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 796 T1 - Kokobo kokoto : over een familie in het zuiden van Senegal Y1 - 1989/// N1 - Catalogus van de gelijknamige tentoonstelling in het Kindermuseum TM Junior van juli 1989 tot zomer 1991 CB exempl. P 89-747 bestaat slechts uit de tentoonstellingscatalogus KW - exhibition catalogues (form) KW - family KW - Senegal RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 48 CY - Amsterdam PB - Koninklijk Instituut voor de Tropen U2 - w9 SN - 90-6832-219-2 AV - AFRIKA 48072 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 052910326 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 793 T1 - Le Niger et ses merveilles = Niger and its wonders A1 - Say,Bania Mahamadou Y1 - 1989/// N1 - Teksten in het Engels en Frans Omslagtitel Bibliogr.: p. 192-194 KW - arts KW - Niger KW - pictorial works (form) KW - travel RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 200 CY - [S.l. PB - s.n.] U2 - w9 AV - AFRIKA 48071 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 386023492 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 797 T1 - Same foundations, new facades? Y1 - 1983/// N1 - Met noten KW - economic conditions KW - political conditions KW - social conditions KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 299 CY - Johannesburg PB - Ravan Press U2 - w9 U3 - Abstract available T3 - South African review ... ; 1 N2 - A broad range of critical social analysts were asked to write relatively brief overviews analysing specific areas of South African society. While they were asked to concentrate on 1982, this Review goes well beyond a statement on that year only, including historical and background information, contemporary analysis and interpretation, and suggestions on future trends and developments. The overall theme binding together the contributions is 'restructuring', a general notion describing the complex processes and changing relationships that are both reshaping and maintaining South African society. Restructuring has been the ruling-class response to a set of deep-rooted 'organic' social crises. Unresolvable conflicts within the system have emerged, forcing the state and capital to respond ideologically, politically and economically. Because these crises and conflicts cannot be resolved within the confines of South Africa's historical form of racial capitalism, ruling-class restructuring has only transformed the nature of crises - not eradicated the basis of social conflict. This volume raises issues about the nature and content of restructuring, and its limitations and constraints. Twenty-two contributions are grouped under six headings: 1. South Africa and Southern Africa - changing relationships in the region; 2. Politics; 3. The economy; 4. Labour; 5. Reproducing society - aspects of the sphere in which social relations are produced and reproduced (health, housing and education); 6. Women. Introductions to the different sections are written by Georgina Jaffee, Helen Zille and Alan Hirsch, Peter Hudson, Eddie Webster and David Webster. [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 0-86975-161-1 AV - AFRIKA 47375 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 37749867X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 798 T1 - The rise and crisis of Afrikaner power A1 - Adam,Heribert A1 - Giliomee,Hermann Y1 - 1979/// N1 - Met noten, index Amerikaanse ed. gepubliceerd onder de titel: Ethnic power mobilized : can South Africa change? KW - Afrikaners KW - apartheid KW - politics KW - power KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 308 CY - Cape Town PB - David Philip U2 - w9 SN - 0-908396-07-4 AV - AFRIKA 47374 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 377495808 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 799 T1 - Guerrilla warfare Y1 - 1970/// N1 - Met noten KW - anti-apartheid resistance KW - national liberation struggles KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 94 CY - London PB - Publicity and Information Bureau, African National Congress U2 - w9 T3 - South African studies ; 1 AV - AFRIKA 47372 Y2 - 2015/02/24/ M3 - 377457078 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 766 T1 - Promoting abstinence, being faithful, and condom use with young Africans : qualitative findings from an intervention trail in rural Tanzania A1 - Plummer,Mary Louisa Y1 - 1220/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 423-474. - Met gloss., index KW - rural areas KW - sex education KW - sexuality KW - Tanzania KW - youth RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XVII, 481 CY - Dar es Salaam PB - Mkuki na Nyota U2 - w9 SN - 978-9987-08247-6 AV - AFRIKA 48217 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 387567755 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 710 T1 - Game changers : diasporadoeners en -denkers voor een andere Afrika-agenda A1 - Asante,Amma A1 - Opoku,Alberta Y1 - -32676/// N1 - Met literatuuropgave KW - Africa KW - development cooperation KW - diasporas KW - essays (form) KW - Netherlands RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 112 CY - [Utrecht] PB - [Stichting Oikos] U2 - w9 SN - 978-90-9028704-1 paperback AV - AFRIKA 48078 Y2 - 2015/02/27/ M3 - 386035814 ER -