TY - BOOK ID - 1671 T1 - Historiographie africaine : Afrique de louest - Afrique centrale A1 - Bah,Thierno Moctar Y1 - 2015/// KW - Central Africa KW - historiography KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Dakar PB - CODESRIA U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 SN - 978-2-86978-599-1 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391578456 L3 - http://www.codesria.org/spip.php?article2286&lang=en ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1670 T1 - The crises of postcoloniality in Africa A1 - Omeje,Kenneth Y1 - 2015/// KW - Africa KW - conflict resolution KW - globalization KW - political conflicts KW - postcolonialism RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Dakar PB - CODESRIA U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 N2 - Collective work. Contents: Prelim -1 Debating postcoloniality in Africa (Kenneth Omeje) - 2 Interrogating discursive constructions of African political history: from the precolonial to the postcolonial (Raphael Chijioke Njoku) -3 Africa in world politics and the political economy of postcoloniality (Dauda Abubakar) - 4 Oil conflicts in the postcolony (Douglas A. Yates) - 5 Exploring the conflicts between traditionalism and modernism in postcolonial Africa (Kenneth Omeje & Chris M. A. Kwaja) - 6 Postcoloniality, conflict intervention and peacebuilding in West Africa: opportunities and challenges (John M. Kabia) - 7 Conflicts and postcolonial identities in East/the Horn of Africa (Macharia Munene) - 8 Postcolonial imperialism in Africas Maghreb and Sahel (Jeremy Keenan) - 9 The crises of postcoloniality in Southern Africa: SADC and conflict intervention in Zimbabwe (Martha Mutisi) -10 Postcolonial politics in Kenya (Moses Onyango) - 11 Contested spaces: gender, governance and womens political engagement in postcolonial Africa (Pamela Machakanja) -12 Pan-Africanism and the crises of postcoloniality: from the organization of African Unity to the African Union (Tim Murithi). [Abstract ASC Leiden] SN - 978-2-86978-602-8 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Ba;D1 M3 - 391578987 L3 - http://www.codesria.org/spip.php?article2289&lang=en ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1672 T1 - The politics of inclusive development : interrogating the evidence A1 - Hickey,Samuel A1 - Sen,Kunal A1 - Bukenya,Badru Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 305-367. - Met index, noten KW - Africa KW - China KW - developing countries KW - development cooperation KW - economic development KW - minority groups KW - political conditions KW - poverty KW - social development KW - social security RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XX, 396 CY - Oxford PB - Oxford University Press U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This book is a collection of chapters investigating the kinds of politics that can help to secure "inclusive development", defined by the editors as "a process that occurs when social and material benefits are equitably distributed across divides within societies". It draws from the initial research findings of the Effective States and Inclusive Development (ESID) Research Centre. Contents: Foreword (David Hulme). Part I: Introduction. Exploring the politics of inclusive development: towards a new conceptual approach (Sam Hickey, Kunal Sen, and Badru Bukenya). Part II: The politics of accumulation and growth. The political determinants of economic growth: an analytical review (Kunal Sen); The politics of what works for the poor in public expenditure and taxation (Paul Mosley); Governing natural resources for inclusive development (Anthony Bebbington). Part III: The politics of social and legal citizenship: promoting and protecting the rights of the poor?. The politics of what works in service delivery (Claire Mcloughlin); Political factors in the growth of social assistance (Armando Barrientos and Sony Pellissery); The politics and process of rule of law systems in developmental States (Deval Desai and Michael Woolcock). Part IV: The politics of recognition. The gendered politics of securing inclusive development (Sohela Nazneen and Simeen Mahmud); Ethnicity, State capacity, and development: reconsidering causal connections (Prerna Singh and Matthias vom Hau). Part V: The transnational politics of development. The politics of aid revisited: a review of evidence on State capacity and elite commitment (Arjan de Haan and Ward Warmerdam); China in Africa: impacts and prospects for accountable development (Giles Mohan) [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 0-19-872256-7 AV - AFRIKA 48318 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ba;E1 M3 - 388650052 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1689 T1 - 'Free Fight on Grand Parade' : resistance to the Greyshirts in 1930s South Africa A1 - Hodes,Rebecca Y1 - 2014/// KW - 1930-1939 KW - political conflicts KW - racism KW - radicalism KW - social conditions KW - South Africa KW - violence RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 185 EP - 208 JA - International Journal of African Historical Studies: (2014), vol.47, no.2, p.185-208. VL - 47 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In April 1936, the South African National Socialist Movement, better known as the Greyshirts, distributed posters around Cape Town, South Africa to advertize a meeting on 'Grand Parade,' a notorious meeting ground and site of political incitement. Louis Weichardt, leader of the Greyshirts, addressed the crowd from on top of a lorry, decorated with swastikas. The meeting soon degenerated into a brawl with opponents, amongst them Jews, Coloureds, communists and trade unionists. This research uses this incident of mob violence in South African history to spotlight some of the ideological conflicts and controversies that emerged at the turn of the twentieth century, and that loomed larger in local politics as the century unfolded. The background to the meeting, its descent into violent chaos, and the trial that was held in its aftermath, are used to analyze the broader socioeconomic upheavals and ideological shifts occuring within South Africa at this time. The paper thus provides a microhistorical appraisal of conflicts within Cape society during the 1930s, with a focus on the strengthening of nascent networks of leftist political radicalism on the one hand, and 'volkish' nationalism on the other. The historical analysis of this event is used to grapple with broader developments, tendencies, and dilemmas in South Africa's social history during the decades preceding the Second World War. Notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Kf;D1;L3 M3 - 391778994 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1680 T1 - A poststructuralist approach to the Dagbon chieftancy crisis in Northern Ghana A1 - Ahorsu,Ken Y1 - 2014/// KW - chieftaincy KW - conflict KW - Dagomba KW - Ghana KW - social change RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 95 EP - 119 JA - African Conflict & Peacebuilding Review: (2014), vol.4, no.2, p.95-119. VL - 4 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The intractable Dagbon Chieftaincy Crisis between the Andani and Abudu families for royal supremacy reflects the dilemma confronting the relevance of chieftaincy in Ghana in the context of social change. The paper offers a poststructuralist explanation for the succession disputes, political manipulations, and perennial violence that have contemporarily characterized the crisis. It posits that the sources and dynamics of the crisis are found in the dominant norms, values, traditions, and common history of the Dagbon state. They are located in the cross-generational structural continuities that are drawn upon and reproduced by purposive actors in strategic interdependence at both the local and national levels. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ff;D2 M3 - 393163067 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1703 T1 - Briefing : crisis in the Central African Republic and the international response A1 - Welz,Martin Y1 - 2014/// KW - African Union KW - Central African Republic KW - Chad KW - civil wars KW - Communaut‚ conomique des Etats de l'Afrique Centrale KW - foreign intervention KW - France KW - international politics KW - UN RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 601 EP - 610 JA - African Affairs: (2014), vol.113, no.453, p.601-610. VL - 113 IS - 453 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - After an historical overview of the conflict in the Central African Republic (CAR), this briefing documents and explores the international response to the crisis, mainly covering the period between the S‚l‚kas rise to power in March 2013 and April 2014, when the UN Security Council passed resolution 2149 to establish the UN operation MINUSCA (Mission multidimensionnelle int‚gr‚e des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation de la R‚publique centrafricaine). The briefing specifically seeks to scrutinize relations between the various stakeholders involved in crisis solution, including international and regional organizations, such as the UN, African Union and Communaut‚ conomique des Etats de l'Afrique Centrale (ECCAS) and individual States, in particular Chad and France. Notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Gd;D2 M3 - 383944066 L3 - http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/113/453/601.short ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1688 T1 - Clothing and community : children's agency in Senegal's School for Sons of Chiefs and Interpreters, 1892-1910 A1 - Duke Bryant,Kelly Y1 - 2014/// KW - colonial administration KW - France KW - group identity KW - school uniforms KW - schools KW - Senegal KW - social status KW - students RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 239 EP - 258 JA - International Journal of African Historical Studies: (2014), vol.47, no.2, p.239-258. VL - 47 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The paper raises questions such as how French officials and African students negotiated aspects of the quotidian within the colonial school and what the implications were of the disjuncture between French rules and expectations and the conduct of the African students. To what extent were students able to challenge school or government officials effectively on the issues that most directly had an impact on them? What might these challenges tell the reader about colonial schooling or the practice of colonial rule? The article explores these questions and others by focussing on ordinary student behaviour and small-scale disobedience at the School for Sons of Chiefs and Interpreters during its second period of operation, around the turn of the twentieth century. Social relationships and clothing two sets of mundane practices that formed a basis for personal identity and sense of self- were areas in which students chose to transgress French regulations or disregard their concerns. These actions are significant not only for what they reveal about young people's agency and identity politics, but also as an example of how Africans could highlight the limitations of the colonial state. Notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fo;C2;L3 M3 - 39270451X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1701 T1 - Comprendre les investissements au S‚n‚gal : entre subsistance, profit, paraŒtre et consentement social A1 - Oudiane,Pascal Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 431-447. - Met gloss., noten KW - attitudes KW - enterprises KW - households KW - investments KW - profit KW - public administration KW - Senegal RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 455 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 SN - 2-296-99877-1 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48551 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 386038155 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1700 T1 - De l'origine des Fulb‚s (Peuls) … l'Empire Satigui (Deniyank‚) A1 - Ba,Ibrahima Mamadou Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bijl., noten KW - Fulani KW - Futa Toro polity KW - genealogy KW - history KW - Senegal RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 112 CY - Paris PB - Harmattan U2 - w22 SN - 2-336-30480-5 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48548 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 386038309 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1711 T1 - Diasporas, development and peacemaking in the Horn of Africa A1 - Laakso,Liisa A1 - Hautaniemi,Petri Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Includes bibliographical references, index and notes KW - development KW - diasporas KW - Ethiopia KW - Northeast Africa KW - peacebuilding KW - Somalia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - VII, 239 CY - London PB - Zed Books, in association with Nordic Africa Institute U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Africa now N2 - This book investigates the role diasporas play in the processes of peacebuilding and development in their home countries. It features case studies from the Horn of Africa, including Somalia and Ethiopia. Contents: Introduction: diasporas for peace and development (Petri Hautaniemi and Liisa Laakso). Part one: contextualising the Horn of Africa and the diaspora. Diaspora and multi-level governance for peace (Liisa Laakso); Regional political history and the production of diasporas (Guenther Schlee). Part two: case studies from the Horn of Africa. Rebuilding Somaliland through economic and educational engagement (Markus Virgil Hoehne and Mohamed Hassan Ibrahim);The Somali diaspora in conflict and peacebuilding: the Peace Initiative Programme (Mahdi Abdile); The 2007 delegation of the Muslim diaspora to Ethiopia (Dereje Feyissa); The Ethiopian diaspora and the Tigray Development Association (Bahru Zewde, Gebre Yntiso and Kassahun Berhanu). Part three: European approaches to diaspora engagement. Interaction between Somali organizations and Italian and Finnish development actors (Petra Mezzetti, Valeria Saggiomo and P„ivi Pirkkalainen); Approaches to diaspora engagement in the Netherlands (Giulia Sinatti); Norwegian collaboration with diasporas (Rojan Ezzati and Cindy Horst). Afterword (Petri Hautaniemi, Liisa Laakso and Mariko Sato). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-1-7836-0097-7 paperback AV - AFRIKA 48400 Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - De;Dd;Df;C3 M3 - 381337537 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1699 T1 - Dictionnaire pratique du fran‡ais du Tchad A1 - Djita,Issa Djarangar Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 17-20 KW - Chad KW - dictionaries (form) KW - French language RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 410 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - tudes africaines SN - 2-343-04070-2 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48544 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 386038392 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1713 T1 - Displacement economies in Africa : paradoxes of crisis and creativity A1 - Hammar,Amanda Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Includes bibliographical references, notes and index KW - Angola KW - Chad KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - displaced persons KW - economic conditions KW - informal sector KW - Kenya KW - livelihoods KW - Senegal KW - Somalia KW - Subsaharan Africa KW - Sudan KW - Uganda KW - Zimbabwe RP - NOT IN FILE EP - VII, 260 CY - London ; New York PB - Zed Books, in association with Nordic Africa Institute U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Africa now N2 - This book investigates the relationship between displacement and economy. It contains case studies of various "displacement economies" from across Subsaharan Africa. Contents: Displacement economies: paradoxes of crisis and creativity in Africa (Amanda Hammar). Part 1 Economies of rupture and repositioning, Securing livelihoods: economic practice in the Darfur-Chad borderlands (Andrea Behrends); Contested spaces, new opportunities: displacement, return and the rural economy in Casamance, Senegal (Martin Evans); The paradoxes of class: crisis, displacement and repositioning in post-2000 Zimbabwe (Amanda Hammar). Part 2 Reshaping economic sectors, markets and investment, Rapid adaptations to change and displacements in the Lundas (Angola) (Cristina Udelsmann Rodrigues); Somali displacements and shifting markets: camel milk in Nairobis Eastleigh estate (Hannah Elliott); Diaspora returnees in Somalilands displacement economy (Peter Hansen); Financial flows and secrecy jurisdictions in times of crisis: relocating assets in Zimbabwe's displacement economy (Sarah Bracking). Part 3 Confinement and economies of loss and hope, The IDP economy in Northern Uganda: a prisoners' economy? (Morten B›†s and Ingunn Bj›rkhaug); 'No Move To Make': the Zimbabwe crisis, displacement-in-place and the erosion of 'proper places' (Jeremy Jones); Captured lives: the precarious space of youth displacement in Eastern DRC (Timothy Raeymaekers). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-1-7803-2489-0 hardback AV - AFRIKA 48402 Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Ea;C3;E1 M3 - 375862471 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1692 T1 - Divining the future of Africa : healing the wounds, restoring dignity and fostering development A1 - Mawere,Munyaradzi Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 147-163. - Met noten KW - Africa KW - African identity KW - culture KW - development KW - globalization KW - indigenous knowledge KW - international relations RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XVII, 163 CY - Bamenda PB - Langaa Research & Publishing CIG U2 - w22 SN - 995-679228-4 AV - AFRIKA 48477 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 390696242 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1683 T1 - Ending impunity for sexual and gender-based crimes : the International Criminal Court and complementarity in the Democratic Republic of Congo A1 - Lake,Milli Y1 - 2014/// KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - International Criminal Court KW - legal reform KW - legal systems KW - offences against the person KW - sexual offences RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 1 EP - 32 JA - African Conflict & Peacebuilding Review: (2014), vol.4, no.2, p.1-32 : tab. VL - 4 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002 to combat impunity for the most serious crimes of international concern. It seeks to do so in two ways: through a series of high-profile cases in The Hague, intended to deter future war criminals; and through its complementarity mechanism, which equips national legal systems to prosecute ICC crimes domestically. Through a case study of the prosecution of sexual and gender-based violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, this article examines efforts by various stakeholders to realize the legal complementarity principle embedded in the Rome Statute. The article argues that the domestic prosecution of ICC crimes requires developments in four distinct areas: legislative reform, institutional reform, education and training, and the building of public trust and participation. The research also reveals that where developments in these areas have occurred, they have been propelled by a variety of domestic and international stakeholders. However, the ICC itself has failed to contribute significantly to the realization of complementarity that is central to achieving its mandate. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Gj;C1;F1 M3 - 392838567 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1697 T1 - Et demain l'agriculture togolaise : une analyse critique des maux qui ruinent l'agriculture togolaise du point de vue du chercheur A1 - Agbobli,Comlan Atsu Luc Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr. p. 105-106 KW - agricultural policy KW - agricultural productivity KW - agriculture KW - Togo RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 110 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - tudes africaines SN - 2-343-04274-8 AV - AFRIKA 48545 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 386038635 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1679 T1 - Germinating seeds of future conflicts in South Sudan A1 - Amusan,Lere Y1 - 2014/// KW - boundary conflicts KW - nation building KW - petroleum industry KW - political stability KW - South Sudan KW - State RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 120 EP - 133 JA - African Conflict & Peacebuilding Review: (2014), vol.4, no.2, p.120-133. VL - 4 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The birth of the new state of the Republic of South Sudan (RSS) continues to generate debate among students of African politics. The core question that must be addressed is how the state will survive in the highly competitive and complex international system. This paper examines the major challenges, including boundary problems, oil wealth, national integration, and system of government and citizenship, that may affect the stability of the state. Bibliogr., note, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Di;D2 M3 - 393163288 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1684 T1 - Ivory's curse: the militarization and professionalization of poaching in Africa A1 - Vira,Varun A1 - Ewing,Thomas Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met noten, samenvatting KW - armed forces KW - elephants KW - illicit trade KW - ivory KW - nature conservation KW - poaching KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Washiongton PB - Born Free USA U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 392836777 L3 - http://a362a94f6d3f5f370057-c70bddd8faa4afe1b2ec557b907836d0.r4.cf1. rackcdn.com/Ivorys-Curse-2014.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1696 T1 - L'exposition postcoloniale : mus‚es et zoos en Afrique de l'Ouest (Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso) A1 - Bondaz,Julien Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 309-341. - Met noten KW - Burkina Faso KW - cultural heritage KW - decolonization KW - exhibitions KW - Mali KW - museums KW - Niger KW - West Africa KW - zoological gardens RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 345 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Connaissance des hommes N2 - Introduction. Mus‚es et zoos en Afrique de l'Ouest: du colonialisme au postcolonialisme. --PremiŠre partie.Niger: le pavillon et l'enclos.La fabrique de la nation --Des animaux de brousse aux g‚nies du mus‚e --DeuxiŠme partie.Mali: la vitrine et la cage.Un mus‚e pour les blancs --SuccŠs populaire et usages clandestins du zoo --La force des choses. --TroisiŠme partie.Burkina Faso: le masque et le troph‚e.Un mus‚e en chantier --Sauvage, domestique et naturalis‚. --Conclusion. Une mise entre guillemets: l'exposition comme forme relationnelle SN - 2-343-04032-X AV - AFRIKA 48564 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 386038686 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1691 T1 - L ‚levage mobile dans la r‚gion de Zinder : une recherche socio-anthropologique : rapport de synthŠse A1 - Olivier de Sardan,J.P. Y1 - 2014/// KW - economic behaviour KW - livestock policy KW - Niger KW - pastoralists KW - water supply RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 112 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Pa;Fm M3 - 391576089 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/248.pdf ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1674 T1 - Land tenure reform and politics in post-conflict C“te d'Ivoire : a precarious peace in the western cocoa regions A1 - Mitchell,Matthew I. Y1 - 2014/// KW - cocoa KW - C“te d'Ivoire KW - land conflicts KW - land tenure RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 203 EP - 221 JA - Canadian Journal of African Studies: (2014), vol.48, no.2, p.203-221. VL - 48 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Although C“te d'Ivoire recently emerged from a long period of protracted conflict, peace is indeed precarious. This is particularly the case in the country's western cocoa regions, where tensions between indigenous and migrant populations continue to pose a threat to C“te d'Ivoire's economic and political recovery. These tensions revolve around longstanding land disputes that culminated in violent attacks in the late 1990s, early 2000s and in the recent 20102011 post-election crisis. Using insights from field work in 2012 conducted in the cocoa regions, this article explores the issue of land tenure reform and politics in post-conflict C“te d'Ivoire. In so doing, it considers the legal and political dimensions of land tenure in the cocoa regions and the highly controversial 1998 land law. This provides the crucial context for analysing the historical and enduring nature of these disputes, the critical importance of land reform in contemporary C“te d'Ivoire and the relationship between the 'land question' and peace at both local and national levels. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fi;E5;F1 M3 - 39347433X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1678 T1 - Le christianisme outrag‚ : la misŠre religieuse en procŠs A1 - Zognong,Dieudonn‚ Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 165-167. - Met noten KW - Africa KW - Cameroon KW - Christianity KW - fraud KW - Pentecostalism KW - popular beliefs RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 170 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 SN - 2-343-02353-0 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48755 Y2 - 2015/05/28/ M3 - 393333388 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1698 T1 - Le droit du d‚veloppement et de l'int‚gration ‚conomique dans l'espace OHADA A1 - Amboulou,Hygin Didace Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 289-295 KW - economic integration KW - economic policy KW - OHADA KW - Subsaharan Africa KW - unification of law RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 304 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - tudes africaines SN - 2-343-04188-1 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48547 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 38603852X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1693 T1 - Les peuples d'Ajatado : Accra et Lagos : des origines … la rencontre avec l'Occident et le christianisme aux XVe siŠcle / Roberto Pazzi 3: L'expansion au XVIe siecle et la premiere mission chretienne en 1660 A1 - Pazzi,Roberto Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bijl., indices, noten KW - 1400-1499 KW - Aja KW - Allada polity KW - Benin KW - historical sources KW - mercantile history KW - migration KW - oral history KW - Portugal KW - Tado polity KW - Togo KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 294 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 SN - 978-2-343-03070-8 AV - AFRIKA 45514.3 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fb;Fq M3 - 390625086 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1694 T1 - Losing your land : dispossession in the Great Lakes A1 - Ansoms,An A1 - Hilhorst,Thea Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bibliogr., index, noten KW - Burundi KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - eviction KW - farmers KW - Great Lakes region KW - land acquisition KW - Rwanda KW - small farms KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIV, 218 CY - Woodbridge PB - James Currey U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available T3 - African issues N2 - This book examines the impact of land grabbing and dispossession on smallholder farmers in the Great Lakes Region. It investigates this issue through case studies in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda. Contents: 1 Introduction: causes & risks of dispossession & land grabbing in the Great Lakes Region (An Ansoms & Thea Hilhorst); 2 Land grabbing & development history: the Congolese experience (Jean-Philippe Peemans); 3 This land is my land: land grabbing in Ituri (DRC) (Dan Fahey); 4 Land grabbing by mining companies: local contentions & State reconfiguration in South Kivu (DRC) (Sara Geenen and Jana H”nke); 5 Competition over soil & subsoil: land grabbing by local elites in South Kivu (DRC) (Klara Claessens, Emery Mudinga & An Ansoms); 6 The continuities in contested land acquisitions in Uganda (Mathijs van Leeuwen, Ilse Zeemeijer, Doreen Kobusingye, Charles Muchunguzi, Linda Haartsen & Claudia Piacenza); 7 Land grabbing & power relations in Burundi: practical norms and real governance (Aymar Nyenyezi Bisoka & An Ansoms); 8 Land grabbing & land tenure security in post-genocide Rwanda (Chris Huggins); 9 The reorganisation of rural space in Rwanda: habitat concentration, land consolidation & collective marshland cultivation (An Ansoms, Giuseppe Cioffo, Chris Huggins & Jude Murison); 10 'Modernizing Kigali': the struggle for space in the Rwandan urban context (Vincent Manirakiza & An Ansoms); Conclusion (Thea Hilhorst & An Ansoms). [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA 48273 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ha;Gj;C1;E5 M3 - 387597743 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1685 T1 - Making sense of fifty years of U.S. Peace Corps service in Cameroon A1 - Amin,Julius A. Y1 - 2014/// KW - aid workers KW - Cameroon KW - development cooperation KW - education KW - health aid KW - United States RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 319 EP - 338 JA - International Journal of African Historical Studies: (2014), vol.47, no.2, p.319-338. VL - 47 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - President John F. Kennedy had a special relationship with the African continent and after his inauguration invoked an executive order to establish the Peace Corps on March 1, 1961. The first contingent of Peace Corps Volunteers arrived in the Republic of Ghana six months later. Peace Corps legislation was created at the height of the Cold War under the authority of the president in the Mutual Security Act, in order to assist developing nations. There is a dearth in scholarship on the Peace Corps and more especially on Volunteers' service in Africa and this paper is written to fill a little of the gap. Focusing on Volunteers' service in education and community health programmes, it examines Peace Corps work in Cameroon from the beginning to the present. It argues that the history of the Peace Corps in Cameroon shows more continuity than change and that the agency had mixed achievements in its goal to help Cameroon and other African nations meet their need for 'trained manpower.' Though Volunteers' work in Africa has made a difference, too often Volunteers were not prepared to work in developing countries, a weakness that highlighted the limitations of idealism. Goodwill alone was no longer sufficient to address the challenges of developing nations in the 21st century. Notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Gc;E2;L3 M3 - 392768658 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1681 T1 - Manipulative and coercive power and the social-ecological determinants of violent conflicts in the Niger Delta of Nigeria A1 - Udoh,Isidore A. A1 - Ibok,Matthew S. Y1 - 2014/// KW - conflict KW - corruption KW - government KW - Nigeria KW - oil companies KW - petroleum industry RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 60 EP - 94 JA - African Conflict & Peacebuilding Review: (2014), vol.4, no.2, p.60-94 : tab. VL - 4 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The protracted conflict in Nigeria's Niger Delta is linked to the power dynamics that define the interaction among micro-and macro-sociopolitical factors related to oil production. This paper examines how individual, interpersonal, community, and societal factors fuel violent conflict and affect efforts to build peace through cooperation, dialogue, and participation in the Niger Delta. Using a cohort of eighty-five focus group participants from fifteen oil-producing communities in Rivers State, this article analyzes the extent to which violent conflicts in the Niger Delta are produced by the exercise of manipulative and coercive power by the Nigerian government and multinational oil companies operating in the region. The participants identified several primary sources of conflict, including divide and rule policies, unemployment, rigging of elections, military raids and suppression, chieftaincy tussle, secrecy, bribery, corruption, and environmental degradation. These factors pertain to the exercise of manipulation and coercion by government and oil companies in the Niger Delta. Bibliogr., ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fn;E6;D1 M3 - 392840235 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1702 T1 - Media role in African changing electoral process : a political communication perspective A1 - Nwokeafor,Cosmas Uchenna A1 - Langmia,Kehbuma Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bibliogr., index KW - Cameroon KW - democracy KW - election management bodies KW - elections KW - Ghana KW - Internet KW - Kenya KW - mass media KW - Nigeria KW - social media KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIX, 229 CY - Lanham [etc.] PB - University Press of America U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This book analyzes the role of mass media in African elections. It contains case studies from Nigeria, Cameroon, Kenya and Ghana. Contributions: Introduction: critical overview of new media, media political systems and polyglot mediatocra{z}y & demo-cra{z}y: the African experience (Cosmas U. Nwokeafor); Internet/online media adoption in African elections (Charles Iheagwara); African politics and the mass media: evidence of the role of the media in elections (Fidelis Kpaduwa); Media and sustainable political development in Africa (Ephraim Okoro); Media power in elections: evidence of the role of agenda-setting theory in political communication in Nigeria's evolving democracy (Cosmas U. Nwokeafor); Media managerial practices and effective media coverage of the electoral process: the Nigerian experience (Matthew Uzukwu); The media and democracy in Nigeria: toward the ethics of social responsibility (Benjamin Arah); Transparency in the polls: a review of the role of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) in the April 2011 general elections in Nigeria (Cosmas U. Nwokeafor); Social media technology and the 2011 presidential election in Cameroon (Kehbuma Langmia); Communicating electoral information in recent elections in Cameroon: a sociolinguistic perspective (Isaiah Ayafor); Radio drama on a fertile ground for engineering democratic values in Sub-Saharan Africa (Victor N. Gomia); Understanding the effects of information communication technology and politics: a synthesized analysis of political participation in Kenya (Victor Wacham A. Mbarika); Media and political pluralism in Ghana's quest for sustainable democracy (Kwaku KB Attakora). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 0-7618-6254-4 AV - AFRIKA 48137 Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Ea;A4;D2 M3 - 383971209 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1690 T1 - Mobile community reporting : a grassroots perspective on journalism A1 - Nyirubugara,Olivier Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 117-141. - Met noten KW - Africa KW - journalism KW - mobile telephone RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 144 CY - Leiden PB - Sidestone Press U2 - w22 SN - 978-90-8890-240-6 AV - AFRIKA 48509 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 391580752 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1706 T1 - Model students : policy emulation, modernization, and Kenya's Vision 2030 A1 - Fourie,Elsje Y1 - 2014/// KW - Asia KW - development plans KW - government policy KW - Kenya RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 540 EP - 562 JA - African Affairs: (2014), vol.113, no.453, p.540-562. VL - 113 IS - 453 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Contemporary scholarship on policy making in Africa tends either to view the process as being entirely divorced from international policy lessons and experiences, or to portray policy makers as prone to unreflective imitation of whichever countries happen to be economically and politically ascendant. Kenya's Vision 2030 demonstrates both of these assumptions to be flawed: not only have Kenyan planners and technocrats consciously emulated foreign models in the formulation and execution of this long-term development plan, but the way in which they have done this is embedded in a historical reading of Kenya's development trajectory as well as the trajectories of those countries from which lessons are drawn. Thus, Vision 2030 bears the imprint of Singaporean and Malaysian policies, rather than only the more modish 'Chinese Model'. Far from heralding the birth of an entirely new East Asia-inspired development paradigm, this emulation echoes the early years of post-colonial Kenya, when technologically optimistic planners such as Tom Mboya sought to guide the country along the path of modernization, deploying tools such as technocratic rule, rapid economic growth, and social engineering. The Kenyan case therefore demonstrates processes of policy emulation in Africa to be both more prevalent and more nuanced than is commonly assumed. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Hc;E1 M3 - 383944031 L3 - http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/113/453/540.abstract ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1712 T1 - Moving along the roadside: A social history of Mwinilunga District, 1870s-1970s Moving along the roadside: a social history of Mwinilunga District, 1870s-1970s A1 - Pea,Iva Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Dissertation Leiden University in order to obtain the degree of Doctor in the year 2014 With summary in Dutch KW - dissertations (form) KW - local history KW - social change KW - Zambia RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Netherlands] PB - [publisher not identified] U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Village layout and settlement patterns in Mwinilunga, a district now part of Zambia's North Western Province, changed profoundly between 1870 and 1970. This thesis examines whether this change in outward appearance - from dispersed settlements to concentrated roadside villages - also brought about change in other spheres of society. Based on a reading of secondary, archival and oral sources, the thesis examines four spheres of social change - production, mobility, consumption, and social relationships. It suggests that rather than running along a linear path of 'progress', or 'development', change in this area tended to be ambiguous, contested and gradual. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/28/ M3 - 381189058 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/28744 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1707 T1 - Patronage from below : political unrest in an informal settlement in South Africa A1 - Dawson,Hannah J. Y1 - 2014/// KW - African National Congress (South Africa) KW - informal settlements KW - local politics KW - patronage KW - protest KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 518 EP - 539 JA - African Affairs: (2014), vol.113, no.453, p.518-539. VL - 113 IS - 453 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Since the mid-2000s militant local political protests have been a frequent occurrence in informal settlements and townships across South Africa. Allegations of corruption and favouritism figure prominently in these demonstrations that often aim to remove local officials who are perceived not to have delivered on their electoral promises. Focusing on the relationship between patronage politics and local protests, this article analyses the 2011 unrest in Zandspruit informal settlement on the outskirts of Johannesburg. The protests were triggered by intra-African National Congress (ANC) rivalry and factionalism in the build-up to the local elections. Through an analysis of the political opportunities, framing processes, and mobilizing structures of the protests, the article depicts the ways in which patronage and collective action work together. By doing so, it reveals the agency "from below" of local elite and subaltern groups in defining the formation and mutual advancement of patron-client relations. The article thus shows how the close relationship between the ANC and the State at the local level gives rise to particular patron-client relations between low-income residents, the ANC, and the State. As a result, the State is not understood as a bureaucratic dispenser of public goods on the basis of rights but as a relational system of reciprocal dependence and obligation. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Kf;D2 M3 - 383944023 L3 - http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/113/453/518.abstract ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1705 T1 - Policing in intimate crowds : moving beyond "the mob" in South Africa A1 - Cooper-Knock,Sarah Jane Y1 - 2014/// KW - groups KW - police KW - popular justice KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 563 EP - 582 JA - African Affairs: (2014), vol.113, no.453, p.563-582. VL - 113 IS - 453 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - A growing scholarship on policing and security has produced valuable insights into the workings of private security firms, State police, and citizen-led policing organizations across Africa. In contrast, few have explored "mob justice", the policing performed by less organized, more transient formations of citizens. In academic and popular accounts, mobs are depicted as anonymous, sovereign entities, acting in a space that the State will not, or cannot, enter. Focusing on the township of KwaMashu in Durban, South Africa, this article challenges this homogeneous depiction. Although anonymous mobs punctuate the township's history, residents often find themselves within "intimate crowds", navigating the ties that frequently bind them to their suspects, and negotiating a space in which they can act without fear of repercussion, legal or otherwise. The State police often play an important role in shaping the parameters of this policing, even when no case is formally opened. This reappraisal of policing formations consolidates and extends our understanding of statehood, society, and sovereignty in post-apartheid South Africa. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Kf;C1 M3 - 38394404X L3 - http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/113/453/563.abstract ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1710 T1 - Religion and AIDS-treatment in Africa : saving souls, prolonging lives A1 - Dijk,Rijk van A1 - Dilger,Hansj”rg A1 - Burchardt,Marian A1 - Rasing,Thera Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met literatuuropgave en index KW - Africa KW - AIDS KW - medicinal drugs KW - religion RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XIII, 303 CY - Farnham PB - Ashgate U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - HIV-AIDS-related issues can be better understood if the relevance of religion is acknowledged, and vice versa, if the study of religion incorporates the challenges arising from HIV/AIDS. This collective volume seeks to combine theoretical and methodological insights from the field of medical anthropology as well as from the study of religion, and to apply them to empirical studies on emerging religiosities in the context of anti-retroviral therapy (ART) in Africa. Some of the chapters of this collective volume were first presented at the international symposium on 'Prolonging Life, Challenging Religion? ARV, New Moralities and the Politics of Social Justice', organized in Lusaka, Zambia, 15-17 April 2009. Contributions: Introduction: religion and AIDS treatment in Africa: the redemptive moment (Hansj”rg Dilger, Marian Burchardt and Rijk van Dijk). Part I, Agency, subjectivity and authority: Fashioning selves and fashioning styles: negotiating the personal and the rhetorical in the experiences of African recipients of ARV treatment (Felicitas Becker); The logic of therapeutic habitus: culture, religion and biomedical AIDS treatments in South Africa (Marian Burchardt); 'A blessing in disguise': the art of surviving HIV/AIDS as a member of the Zionist Christian Church in South Africa (Bjarke Oxlund); 'God has again remembered us!': Christian identity and men's attitudes to antiretroviral therapy in Zambia (Anthony Simpson). Part II, Contesting therapeutic domains and practices: Prophetic medicine, antiretrovirals, and the therapeutic economy of HIV in northern Nigeria (Jack Ume Tocco); 'Silent nights, anointing days': post-HIV test religious experience in Ghana (Benjamin Kobina Kwansa); The blood of Jesus and CD4 count: dreaming, developing and navigating therapeutic options for curing HIV/AIDS in Tanzania (Dominik Mattes). Part III, Emergent organizational forms in times of art: Societal dynamics, state relations, and international connections: influences on Ghanaian and Zambian Church mobilization in AIDS treatment (Amy S. Patterson); The role of religious institutions in the district-level governance of anti-retroviral treatment in western Uganda (A.M.J. Leusenkamp); Negotiating holistic care with the 'rules' of ARV treatment in a Catholic community-based organization in Kampala (Louise Mubanda Rasmussen); Notions of efficacy around a Chinese medicinal plant: artemisia annua - an innovative AIDS therapy in Tanzania (Caroline Meier zu Biesen). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-1-409-45669-8 AV - AFRIKA 48693 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ba;B1;I1 M3 - 381357740 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1709 T1 - Religion and state in Tanzania revisited : reflections from 50 years of independence A1 - Ndaluka,Thomas A1 - Wijsen,Frans Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - African religions KW - Christianity KW - Church and State KW - Islamic movements KW - religion KW - religious history KW - social change KW - Tanzania RP - NOT IN FILE EP - X, 208 CY - Berlin PB - Lit Verlag U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Interreligious studies ; Volume 7 N2 - This book looks at the relationship between religion and State in Tanzania as a feature of the Tanzanian social scene from pre-colonial and colonial to post-colonial times. The authors examine the changes in the character of religion and State relations, especially after independence, and the way these changes are experienced in different communities (particularly by African traditionalists, Muslims and Christians). The book studies the nature of the relationship between religion and State, the way it is conceptualized and experienced, and the implications for the democratic aspirations of pluralist Tanzania. Contributions by Hamza Njozi, Thomas Ndaluka, Bertram Mapunda, Oswald Masebo, Salvatory Nyanto, M. Kilaini, Frans Wijsen, Francis Lyimo, Ahmad Kipacha, Justina Dugbazah, Simeon Mesaki, Richard Sambaiga, Evaristi Magotti, Huruma Sigalla and Sam Maghimbi. [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 3-643-90546-7 AV - AFRIKA 48278 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - He;B1;D2 M3 - 382962230 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1708 T1 - Smuggling ideologies : from criminalization to hybrid governance in African clandestine economies A1 - Meagher,Kate Y1 - 2014/// KW - boundaries KW - East Africa KW - illicit trade KW - images KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 497 EP - 517 JA - African Affairs: (2014), vol.113, no.453, p.497-517. VL - 113 IS - 453 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article explores shifting perspectives on African clandestine economies. Previously condemned as products of clientelism and corruption, clandestine economies are attracting renewed interest for their developmental potential in weak State contexts. Focusing on systems of illicit cross-border trade in East and West Africa, this article shows that more favourable views of clandestine trading activities are driven more by their compatibility with liberal reform agendas than by their positive contribution to local development. Indeed, the optimistic turn in perspectives on illicit African trade glosses over its increasingly negative impact on local security and development. While discourses of violence and criminalization were used to characterize the largely peaceful cross-border trading systems in West Africa in the 1990s, new discourses of hybrid governance and State building are used to frame the more violent and socially disruptive cross-border trading complexes of East Africa in the 2000s. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Fa;Ha;E7 M3 - 383944015 L3 - http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/113/453/497.abstract ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1682 T1 - Social networks, resources, and international NGOs in postwar Sierra Leone A1 - Bolten,Catherine E. Y1 - 2014/// KW - NGO KW - poverty KW - Sierra Leone KW - social networks KW - wages RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 33 EP - 59 JA - African Conflict & Peacebuilding Review: (2014), vol.4, no.2, p.33-59. VL - 4 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The wages paid to local employees by international NGOs and the grants given to community organizations are an understudied aspect of the effect of aid on war-affected countries. In this article, the author explores how wages and grants become part of social networks in Makeni, in northern Sierra Leone, and argues that cash infusions cause tension within networks and between payees and INGOs because organizations refuse to 'inflate' wages and grants, and yet recipients suffer extreme poverty and support vast social networks. INGOs do not want to pay more than the earnings of low-level civil servants, though popular perception is that they can and should. Community-based organizations (CBO's) also begin their activities by repaying debts and giving them limited life spans. These tensions contribute to mistrust in communities of INGO's and CBO's, and to perceptions of hoarding, which adversely affects the willingness of residents to cooperate and may hasten program failure. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fp;C1;E1 M3 - 392839083 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1704 T1 - Students, arson, and protest politics in Kenya : school fires as political action A1 - Cooper,Elizabeth Y1 - 2014/// KW - arson KW - Kenya KW - protest KW - pupils KW - secondary education RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 583 EP - 600 JA - African Affairs: (2014), vol.113, no.453, p.583-600. VL - 113 IS - 453 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Nearly every week there are stories of destructive fires in Kenyan secondary schools. Most of these are suspected arson cases, and the usual suspects are the schools' current students. This article provides the first analysis of the recent spate of school-based fire incidents, based on a comprehensive survey of media, government, and court reports, as well as primary data collected through interviews with students, educators, and administrators. This evidence clearly demonstrates that school-based arson is a phenomenon that spans regions in Kenya, and occurs in boys', girls', and mixed schools, private and public schools, and across school calendars. Current and former students explain this trend in terms of arson's effectiveness as a tactic in protest politics. Based on these findings, the author argues that school-based arson is indicative of more than the contested conditions of education in Kenya. The use of arson by students reflects what this generation has learned about how protest and politics work in Kenya. Students' recognition that destructive collective actions are efficacious in winning a response from authorities highlights that learning and feeds a reactionary mode of governance in which citizens' initiatives tend to be neglected until they pose direct threats to public peace and financing. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M1 - Hc;C1 M3 - 383944058 L3 - http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/113/453/583.abstract ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1675 T1 - The progress in establishing the rule of law in C“te dIvoire under Ouattaras presidency A1 - Bovcon,Maja Y1 - 2014/// KW - courts KW - C“te d'Ivoire KW - leadership KW - legal reform KW - rule of law RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 185 EP - 202 JA - Canadian Journal of African Studies: (2014), vol.48, no.2, p.185-202. VL - 48 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Creating an autonomous and efficient judiciary represents an important and necessary step for the consolidation of democracy and the reconciliation of a nation divided by almost two decades of conflict over the contentious issue of Ivoirit‚. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the progress that has been made in the establishment of the rule of law in C“te dIvoire under the current president, Alassane Ouattara, by comparing the period of his presidency to those of his predecessors, Henri Konan B‚di‚, General Robert Guei and Laurent Gbagbo. The author argues that the judiciary is still struggling to establish its autonomy and that one of its main problems is its lack of impartiality. She examines possible reasons for the courts' persistent weak accountability performance and discuss possible remedies. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fi;D1;F1 M3 - 393473767 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1687 T1 - They never finished their journey : the territorial limits of Fang ethnicity in Equatorial Guinea, 1930-1963 A1 - Okenve,Enrique N. Y1 - 2014/// KW - boundaries KW - Cameroon KW - colonial territories KW - Equatorial Guinea KW - ethnic identity KW - ethnicity KW - Fang KW - Gabon KW - nationalism RP - NOT IN FILE JA - International Journal of African Historical Studies: (2014), vol.47, no.2, p.259-285 : krt. VL - 47 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Territorial borders represented one of the most conspicuous symbols of colonial domination in Africa. They introduced a new concept, territoriality, which transformed Africans' self-perception, their sense of identity, in ways that few other European ideas managed to achieve. The paper analyses how in Equatorial Guinea, the peoples known today as Fang or Beti, a highly segmentary society prior to colonialism, were impacted by colonial rule and how their social identities developed. A group of mission-educated Fang from southern Cameroon reacted to colonial rule by reinforcing the role of their clan and restoring ties between split clans. In the process, they ignored the colonial territorial borders, marching and spreading their 'affirmation movement' (Elat-Ayong) into northern Gabon and northern Rio Mundi. By the 1950s, the movement contributed to the development of a cohesive Fang ethnicity. The paper further discusses the contribution of ethnicity to the development of Fang identity and its relationship with Equatoguinean nationalism to demonstrate that territoriality became a dominant feature. The Fang were able to transcend the territorial borders that set them apart, and develop a trans-border ethnic identity, and some Fang even contemplated the possibility of political union across the existing colonial borders. The author concludes by showing the development of modern Fang ethnicity and how it played a significant role in the radicalization of sectors of Equatoguinean nationalism by providing an alternative 'African' ideology. Notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Gg;C2;L3 M3 - 392708736 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1695 T1 - Ujamaa : the hidden story of Tanzania's socialist villages A1 - Ibbott,Ralph Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met bibliogr., bijl., noten KW - political history KW - social history KW - Tanzania KW - ujamaa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 347 CY - London PB - Crossroads Books U2 - w22 SN - 978-0-9568140-1-2 AV - AFRIKA 48327 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 387597514 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1686 T1 - Verandah boys versus reactionary lawyers : nationalist activism in Ghana, 1946-1956 A1 - Bob-Milliar,George M. Y1 - 2014/// KW - 1940-1949 KW - 1950-1959 KW - elections KW - Ghana KW - nationalism KW - political action KW - political participation KW - political parties RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 287 EP - 318 JA - International Journal of African Historical Studies: (2014), vol.47, no.2, p.287-318 : tab. VL - 47 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The paper analyses political party activism in the pre-independence period in Ghana. The objective is to present an understanding of the culture of party activism in the 1950s. The type of political activism discussed in this article was of two kinds: micro- and macro-level activism, and rural and urban activism. The emphasis in the paper is on micro-level political behaviour. The paper begins with a survey of political activities leading up to the inauguration of the UGCC (United Gold Coast Convention), and later of the CPP (Convention People's Party). The next section discusses political parties, activists, particularly at the grassroots level, and their modes of engagement as evidenced in the three general elections. Special emphasis is put on activists and their organizational strategies. By detailing the two main parties's activities, the author concludes that the CCP leadership managed to understand political organization far better than its competitors and was therefore much more successful in mobilizing grassroots support. Notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ff;D2;L3 M3 - 392710935 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1673 T1 - Warlord undone? : Strongman politics and post-conflict state-building in Northeastern C“te d'Ivoire (20022013) A1 - Speight,Jeremy Y1 - 2014/// KW - conflict KW - C“te d'Ivoire KW - leadership KW - local politics KW - political participation KW - State formation RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 223 EP - 241 JA - Canadian Journal of African Studies: (2014), vol.48, no.2, p.223-241. VL - 48 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article examines the role played by strongmen in C“te d'Ivoire's post-conflict reconstruction. While many acknowledge the unhindered or even the enhanced political influence these actors often enjoy as a result of their relationship to the state in post-conflict contexts, existing debates in C“te d'Ivoire, as well as elsewhere, often remain couched in terms of the implications of these kinds of relationships. Does working with rural strongmen tied to former insurgencies enhance the authority of the central state? Or do such alliances wither state institutions capable of providing long-term political order in peripheral areas? This article downplays these questions. Instead, it examines the alliances which form between strongmen and other actors amidst conflicts over local authority during post-conflict reconstruction. It suggests that the specific configuration of these alliances matter in determining the utility of allying with local strongmen during war to peace transitions. This article examines these struggles through the case of Morou Ouattara and the local Forces Nouvelles (FN) administration in Bouna, Northeastern C“te d'Ivoire. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fi;D1 M3 - 393475859 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1718 T1 - Apports de l'arch‚ologie … l'histoire du Cameroun : le sol pour m‚moire A1 - Niz‚s‚t‚,Bienvenu Denis Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 377-403 KW - Adamawa polity KW - archaeology KW - Cameroon KW - Dii KW - local history KW - Mbum (Cameroon,Central African Republic) KW - metalworking industry KW - pottery RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 420 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 SN - 2-343-02308-5 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48529 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 389923672 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1717 T1 - Au temps jadis … Monfa : l‚gende dagara du Burkina Faso A1 - Sila,J‚mal Dazoaba Y1 - 2013/// KW - Burkina Faso KW - Dagari KW - legends (form) KW - oral literature (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 140 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - crire l'Afrique SN - 2-343-01507-4 pbk AV - AFRIKA 48528 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 389925101 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1714 T1 - Corruption, good governance and the African state : a critical analysis of the political-economic foundations of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa A1 - Ganahl,Joseph Patrick Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 259-287. - Met indices, noten KW - corruption KW - economic conditions KW - governance KW - politics KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Potsdam PB - Potsdam University Press U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - Potsdam economic studies, ISSN 2196-9302 ; 2 N2 - African states are often called corrupt indicating that the political system in Africa differs from the one prevalent in the economically advanced democracies. This however does not give us any insight into what makes corruption the ruling norm of African statehood. Thus we must turn to the overly neglected theoretical work on the political economy of Africa in order to determine how the poverty of governance in Africa is firmly anchored both in Africas domestic socioeconomic reality, as well as in the regions role in the international economic order. Instead of focusing on increased monitoring, enforcement and formal democratic procedures, this book integrates economic analysis with political theory in order to arrive at a better understanding of the political-economic roots of corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa SN - 978-3-86956-248-3 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 39283801X L3 - https://publishup.uni-potsdam.de/opus4-ubp/frontdoor/index/index/docId/ 6664 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1716 T1 - Nairobi : then & now A1 - Mills,Stephen A1 - Mills,Bhavna Y1 - 2013/// KW - architectural history KW - buildings KW - capitals KW - Kenya KW - photography KW - pictorial works (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 127 CY - [Nairobi] PB - Mills Publishing Ltd U2 - w22 N2 - Photographs of Nairobi taken between 1898 and 2013, paired as comparative views, with detailed captions. Published on the occasion of Kenya's 50th anniversary of independence SN - 9966-17600-4 AV - AFRIKA 48474 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 391038508 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1715 T1 - The GoBifo project evaluation report : assessing the impacts of community-driven development in Sierra Leone A1 - Casey,Katherine A1 - Glennerster,Rachel A1 - Miguel,Edward Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 49. - Met bijl., samenvatting KW - community development KW - community participation KW - development projects KW - evaluation KW - Sierra Leone RP - NOT IN FILE CY - New Delhi PB - International Initiative for Impact Evaluation U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - Impact evaluation report ; 3 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391538950 L3 - http://www.povertyactionlab.org/sites/default/files/publications/45_64% 20GoBifo%20Final%20Report%20Oct2013.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1719 T1 - Miners shot down A1 - Desai,Rehad Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Afrikaanse taal en Engels gesproken KW - assassination KW - documentary films (form) KW - miners KW - police KW - political repression KW - South Africa KW - strikes KW - videos (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 1 CY - Johannesburg PB - Uhuru Productions U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In August 2012, mineworkers in one of South Africas biggest platinum mines began a wildcat strike for better wages. Six day later, on August 16, the police used live ammunition to brutally suppress the strike, killing thirty-four people and injuring many more. The police insisted that they shot in self-defense. Using the point of view of the Marikana miners, this documentary film tells a different story, following the strike from day one, showing the courageous but isolated fight waged by a group of low-paid workers against the combined forces of the mining company Lonmin, the ANC government and their allies in the National Union of Mineworkers. What emerges is collusion at the top, spiralling violence and the countrys first post-apartheid massacre. The film weaves together the central point of view of three strike leaders, Mambush, Tholakele and Mzoxolo, with compelling police footage, TV archive and interviews with lawyers representing the miners in the ensuing commission of inquiry into the massacre. Note: this free online version is interrupted by commercials. [Abstract ASC Leiden] AV - online resource Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 393205487 L3 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=9N3hiA_rjaY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znXNzBSh3wc ER - TY - ADVS ID - 1721 T1 - Abyssinia Ethiopia : meeting point A1 - Khalifa,Denis Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Amhaars en Engels gesproken, Engels ondertiteld KW - documentary films (form) KW - Ethiopia KW - Ethiopian Church KW - Falasha KW - Jewish culture KW - religious festivals KW - travel KW - videos (form) RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Saint Mande] PB - Docsud U2 - w22 N2 - The meeting of Getnet, an Ethiopian Jew, and Salomon, an Orthodox Christian, takes us into the heart of Ethiopia's history and religious traditions. Salomon and Getnet meet in the bus as they travel from Addis Ababa to Gonder, 900 kilometers through Ethiopia's villages and countryside. Getnet introduces Salomon to the Falasha community, who are waiting for visas for Israel, and to the Beth Abraham, rural Jews living in solitude and practicing their religious rites according to ancient oral traditions. In return, Salomon takes Getnet into the whirlwind of the Timkat festival, the Ethiopian epiphany. The city is electrified by the rhythm of drums, mock battles, and ritual dances inspired by the Bible. It is the most spectacular event in the Horn of Africa. [Abstract reproduced from dvd-video] AV - AFRIKA AVM1624 Y2 - 2015/05/26/ M3 - 392504324 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1720 T1 - Guidebook : addressing climate change challenges in Africa : a practical guide towards sustainable development A1 - Massawa,Emily Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Omslagtitel Bibliogr.: p. 227-255. - Met bijl KW - Africa KW - climate change KW - environmental policy RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Nairobi [etc.'] PB - AMCEN [etc.] U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 392843986 L3 - http://www.unep.org/roa/amcen/docs/publications/guidebook_CLimateChange. pdf ER - TY - ADVS ID - 1722 T1 - Silent stories : four people, three continents, one dream A1 - Phlypo,Hanne A1 - Vuylsteke,Catherine Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Frans en Arabisch gesproken, Nederlands, Frans en Engels ondertiteld KW - Algeria KW - Belgium KW - documentary films (form) KW - Guinea KW - immigrants KW - LGBT KW - refugees KW - Senegal KW - videos (form) RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Brussel PB - Caviar Films U2 - w22 N2 - This documentary film follows two men and two women from Algeria, Senegal, Iraq and Guinea whose sexual orientation forced them to leave their country whether they were bisexual, homosexual, lesbian or transsexual. Three of them are rebuilding their lives in Belgium, for the fourth, the Iraqi transsexual Sarah, long years of waiting have finally resulted in political asylum and the prospect of a gender operation. Different as the four characters might be in terms of age, social and educational background and country of origin, what binds them is their emotional struggle, their grief for what they lost and their hope for what the future might bring. [Abstract reproduced from dvd-video] AV - AFRIKA AVM1625 Y2 - 2015/05/26/ M3 - 392502771 ER - TY - JFULL ID - 1730 T1 - Akwaba : revue semestrielle de th‚ologie et de culture Y1 - 2010/// N1 - Verschijnt 2x per jaar KW - Catholic Church KW - Christian orders KW - Christian theology KW - C“te d'Ivoire RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Akwaba : revue semestrielle de th‚ologie et de culture U2 - w22 SN - 2072-6864 AV - AFRIKA LN71 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 385976429 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1723 T1 - An investigation into the influence of modernity on the traditional pottery industry of the Igbo of Southeastern Nigeria during the colonial and post-colonial eras A1 - Ali,Vincent Egwu Y1 - 2010/// KW - Afikpo KW - Igbo KW - Nigeria KW - pottery RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Research Review: (2010), vol.26, no.2, p.75-89 : graf., krt., tab. VL - 26 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This paper reports on an investigation into the influence of modernity as the possible cause of decline in the traditional pottery industry in Igbo of Southeastern Nigeria during the colonial and post-colonial eras, with particular reference to Afikpo and Ishiagu, which are among the representative pottery centres still making pottery. The study adopted un-structured in-depth interviews involving twenty-seven potters from Ishiagu and fourteen from Afikpo. Altogether, the forty-one potters involved in the interviews were the only surviving potters, some of whom are still making pottery. The study revealed that the emergence of modern pottery products and the introduction of western education have had a devastating influence on the Igbo pottery tradition. The introduction of modern pottery and other related products such as plastics, aluminum, glass, and enamel wares into Nigerian markets affected and still affects the distribution and sale of local pottery products. The situation became rather complex with the introduction of western education, which led to the disappearance of apprentices who used to assist the potters in the production processes and who eventually had to carry on the tradition. Presently, the potters complain that the craft has become too tedious, which has led to its abandonment by some of them for other professions. The study also revealed other factors of decline in traditional pottery, which include occupational stigmatization, traditional belief systems and the deaths of renowned potters. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Fn;E6 M3 - 393354873 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1729 T1 - Peuls et mobilit‚ dans le cercle de Douentza : lespace social et la t‚l‚phonie mobile en question A1 - Sangar‚,Boukary Y1 - 2010/// KW - communication KW - Fulani KW - Mali KW - mobile telephone KW - mobility KW - theses (form) RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Bamako PB - Universit‚ de Bamako ; Facult‚ des Lettres, Langues, Arts et Sciences Humaines Sociologie U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391739530 L3 - http://www.connecting-in-times-of-duress.nl/wp-content/uploads/memoire- sangarc3a9-boukary1.pdf ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1726 T1 - Recognition and integration of traditional medicine in Ghana : a perspective A1 - Owoahene-Acheampong,Stephen A1 - Vasconi,Elisa Y1 - 2010/// KW - folk medicine KW - Ghana KW - government policy KW - national identity RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 1 EP - 17 JA - Research Review: (2010), vol.26, no.2, p.1-17. VL - 26 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The paper examines the processes of recognition and legitimization of traditional medicine in Ghana and indicates that in Ghana, indigenous medicine has been used as an instrument to help develop political consensus and consciousness and in the building of a national identity. The Ghanaian government recognizes traditional medicine and has a policy for the integration of indigenous medicine; the paper shows that the policy limits traditional medicine almost exclusively to herbal products and the scientific elements of it without taking into consideration its other dimensions of treating illnesses. Thus the policy leads to bureaucratization of traditional medicine. The paper calls for a policy of integration that will promote a parallel and full development of both orthodox and indigenous therapeutic traditions to enable them to continue to provide the health care needs of the people. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ff;D2;I1 M3 - 393353478 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1728 T1 - Solar lighting for the base of the pyramid : overview of an emerging market A1 - Macharia,Edwin Y1 - 2010/// N1 - Bibliogr.: page 77-78. - Met noten, samenvatting KW - Africa KW - marketing KW - solar energy RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Washington, DC PB - World Bank U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 393141403 L3 - http://www.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/a68a120048fd175eb8dcbc849537832d/ SolarLightingBasePyramid.pdf?MOD=AJPERES ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1724 T1 - The 'bildungsroman' in Cameroon Anglophone literature : John Nkemngong Nkengasong's 'Across the Mongolo' and Margaret Afuh's 'Born before her time' A1 - Ngongkum,Eunice Y1 - 2010/// KW - Cameroon KW - English language KW - identity KW - literary criticism KW - literature KW - postcolonialism RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 55 EP - 74 JA - Research Review: (2010), vol.26, no.2, p.55-74. VL - 26 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This paper investigates the 'bildungsroman' genre in postcolonial Cameroon Anglophone fiction through a textual analysis of John Nkemngong Nkengasong's 'Across the Mongolo' and Margaret Afuh's 'Born before Her Time'. It seeks to show that these two writers have borrowed a foreign genre and successfully manipulated its original template to highlight the problems between the individuals' aims and the socio-cultural, political and economic values of the post colony. It also aims at demonstrating that a close reading of these texts deepens our understanding of the bildungsroman in the Cameroon literary context and its inevitable relationship to questions of identity. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Gc;K2 M3 - 393354601 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1725 T1 - The social and reproductive health implications of independent north-south child migration in Ghana A1 - Kwankye,Stephen O. Y1 - 2010/// KW - children KW - Ghana KW - migration KW - social conditions KW - street children KW - working conditions RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 19 EP - 36 JA - Research Review: (2010), vol.26, no.2, p.19-36 : fig., graf., tab. VL - 26 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Independent north-south migration of children has become a strategy in response to widespread poverty in Northern Ghana. Children migrate independently of their parents and other relations to southern cities, cocoa producing areas and mining towns. The majority of these migrants are females, often with little or no education. In the cities they work mainly as 'kayayei' or head porters at the main market centres and lorry parks. With some of them living virtually on the streets and in kiosks, in front of shops and in uncompleted buildings, the migrant 'kayayei' are exposed to physical, environmental, sexual and reproductive health risks, notwithstanding the valuable services they provide and from which they make a living. This paper examines this emerging phenomenon using a 2005 survey of 451 north-south independent child migrants in Accra and Kumasi to highlight the social and reproductive health implications of the movement of these youngsters to southern Ghanaian cities and towns. Using both quantitative and qualitative analytical techniques, the paper finds among other things that while some of the child migrants reduce their poverty by migrating to southern cities and towns, others return home with unplanned pregnancies and sometimes terminal illnesses which render their migration socio-economically unproductive. Bibliogr., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M1 - Ff;C1;C6 M3 - 393353613 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1727 T1 - Who killed captain Alex? A1 - Isaac,Godfrey Geoffrey Y1 - 2010/// N1 - Luganda gesproken, Engels ondertiteld KW - armed forces KW - crime KW - feature films (form) KW - humour KW - Uganda KW - videos (form) KW - violence RP - NOT IN FILE EP - Onlilne CY - Kampala PB - Ramon Film Productions U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This comic feature film is presented as Uganda's first action movie. The filmmaker founded Wakaliwood, the home of Ramon Film Productions, an action movie studio based in the slums of Kampala, Uganda. The name is a combination of the ghetto of Wakaliga and Hollywood. The filmmaker shoots his films in Luganda, the dialect of Buganda, Ugandas largest ethnic group. He has added English subtitles to his DVDs at the request of the Ugandan upper class who is now taking an interest in his work. As is common in the ghettos of Uganda, a Video Joker (VJ), best described as part comedian, narrator, cheerleader and slum tour guide, provides commentary all along the film. [Abstract ASC Leiden] AV - Online resource Y2 - 2015/05/28/ M3 - 393201732 L3 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BymeLkZ7GqM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEoGrbKAyKE ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1731 T1 - Environmental governance and climate change in Africa : legal perspectives A1 - Mwebaza,Rose A1 - Kotz‚,Louis J. Y1 - 2009/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 282-283. - Met noten, samenvatting The impact of climate change in East Africa -- Gender roles, land degradation and climate change -- Climate change and informal institutions in the Lake Victoria Basin -- Adaptation policies in Africa -- Policy, legislative and regulatory challenges in promoting renewable energy in Nigeria -- Biofuels in Tanzania -- Towards sustainable development -- The clean development mechanism and forestry projects in Cameroon -- Regulatory mechanisms for implementing renewable energy projects in Uganda -- Climate change and the international human rights framework -- Implications of climate change for the right to health in Uganda KW - Cameroon KW - climate change KW - East Africa KW - environmental policy KW - Nigeria RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Pretoria PB - Institute for Security Studies U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - ISS monograph ; 167 SN - 1-920114-91-2 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 392844109 L3 - http://www.iss.co.za/uploads/M167Full.pdf http://www.area-net.org/fileadmin/user_upload/AREA/AREA_downloads/ Climate_Change/ClimateChange_environmental_governance.pdf ER - TY - JFULL ID - 1733 T1 - PRODDER directory : NGOs and development in South Africa .. PRODDER directory A1 - Barnard,David A1 - Molale,Aadila Y1 - 2008/// N1 - Verschijnt 1x per jaar Voortz. van: People and projects in development : the directory of South African development organisations KW - development KW - directories (form) KW - NGO KW - South Africa KW - Southern Africa RP - NOT IN FILE JA - PRODDER directory : NGOs and development in South Africa ... U2 - w22 SN - 978-0-620-40139-5 (2008) AV - AFRIKA Hb.Dir/Bar/I-6 Y2 - 2015/05/26/ M1 - Na M3 - 317339567 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1732 T1 - PRODDER directory PRODDER directory : NGOs and development in South Africa .. Y1 - 2008/// N1 - Online directory about NGOs and other development organisations in South Africa Voortz. van: People and projects in development : the directory of South African development organisations KW - development KW - directories (form) KW - NGO KW - South Africa KW - Southern Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Braamfontein PB - Southern African NGO Network (SANGONeT) U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/26/ M3 - 393421368 L3 - http://www.prodder.org.za/ ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1734 T1 - Les pouvoirs locaux dans la commune de Filingu‚ A1 - Alou,Mahaman Tidjani Y1 - 2005/// KW - administrative divisions KW - decentralization KW - local government KW - Niger KW - public services RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 31 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391577751 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/118.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1736 T1 - Conflits fonciers et am‚nagements hydro-agricoles dans le canton de Dessa A1 - Dagobi,Abdoua Elhadji Y1 - 2004/// KW - irrigation KW - land conflicts KW - Niger KW - taxation RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 29 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391576445 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/116.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1738 T1 - Des pouvoirs locaux dans lattente de la d‚centralisation (Niger) A1 - Olivier de Sardan,J.P. Y1 - 2004/// KW - decentralization KW - local government KW - Niger KW - traditional rulers RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 27 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391575430 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/114.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1739 T1 - Foncier agropastoral, conflits et gestion des al‚as climatiques au Niger : cas de Dakoro et Abalak A1 - Mohamadou,A. Y1 - 2004/// KW - droughts KW - economic behaviour KW - food shortage KW - land conflicts KW - local government KW - Niger KW - risk RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 26 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391575260 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/113.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1735 T1 - Le foncier pastoral : cas du terroir de Dembouten A1 - Mohamadou,A. Y1 - 2004/// KW - customary law KW - land conflicts KW - land rights KW - Niger KW - pastoralists KW - Tuareg KW - water management RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 30 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391577484 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/117.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1737 T1 - Partis et dynamiques politiques locales dans les futures communes rurales de Bankilar‚ et du Gorouol A1 - Hahonou,Eric Komlavi Y1 - 2004/// KW - decentralization KW - local government KW - local politics KW - Niger KW - political parties RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Niamey PB - LASDEL U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - tudes et travaux ; no. 28 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2015/05/27/ M3 - 391575554 L3 - http://www.lasdel.net/spip/IMG/115.pdf ER - TY - JFULL ID - 1742 T1 - Outre-mers : revue d'histoire Outre-mers : revue d'histoire, ISSN 1631-0438 Y1 - 2001/// N1 - Verschijnt 1x per 3 maanden Voortz. van: Revue fran‡aise d'histoire d'Outre-Mer = ISSN 0300-9513 KW - Africa KW - colonial history KW - developing countries KW - history RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Outre-mers : revue d'histoire U2 - No. 330-331 (1Šre semestre 2001) -No. 373-374 (2011) = t. 88 - t.98 w22 SN - 1631-0438 AV - Elektronisch tijdschrift Y2 - 2015/05/28/ M1 - (213-77);(6);325.4(091);960;Aa;Ba M3 - 393455068 L3 - http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/revue/outre ER - TY - JFULL ID - 1740 T1 - Revue b‚ninoise de sciences juridiques et administratives : RBSJA Y1 - 1980/// N1 - Title varies slightly Verschijnt 2x per jaar KW - administrative law KW - Benin RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Revue b‚ninoise de sciences juridiques et administratives : RBSJA U2 - No 1 (oct., nov. et d‚c. 1980) - w22 SN - 1840-5169 AV - AFRIKA LN70 Y2 - 2015/05/29/ M3 - 392190494 ER - TY - JFULL ID - 1741 T1 - Revue fran‡aise d'histoire d'Outre-Mer Revue fran‡aise d'histoire d'Outre-Mer, ISSN 0300-9513 Y1 - 1959/// N1 - Voortz. van: Revue d'histoire des colonies = ISSN 0399-1385 Voortgez. als: Outre-mers = ISSN 1631-0438 KW - Africa KW - colonial history KW - developing countries KW - history RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Revue fran‡aise d'histoire d'Outre-Mer U2 - T. 46 (1959) - t. [87 (2e semestre 2000)] = no. 162 - no. 328-329 (2e semestre 2000) w22 SN - 0300-9513 AV - Elektronisch tijdschrift Y2 - 2015/05/28/ M1 - (213-77);(6);325.4(091);960;Aa;Ba M3 - 393456102 L3 - http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/revue/outre ER -