TY - JOUR ID - 1923 T1 - Digital futures and analogue pasts? : citizenship and ethnicity in techno-utopian Kenya A1 - Poggiali,Lisa Y1 - 2017/// KW - citizenship KW - ethnic relations KW - information technology KW - Kenya KW - national identity RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 253 EP - 277 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2017), vol.87, no.2, p.253-277. VL - 87 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In this article, the author explores how digital technologies in Kenya emerged as a site through which questions of citizenship were posed, if not resolved, at a moment of national crisis. She draws attention, specifically, to the ways in which developers, bloggers and state actors mobilized techno-utopian narratives about Kenya's "Silicon Savannah" to advocate for what she calls "digital citizenship", an ethical blueprint for how best to belong to the nation. While social scientists writing about ICT in Africa have focused primarily on Africans' novel uses of objects such as mobile phones, she contributes to this conversation by interrogating how digital technologies have been mobilized as an idiom to both challenge and perpetuate social cleavages of ethnicity and class. "Digital citizenship", she suggests, compels us to revisit debates about (post)colonial history, ideologies that undergird digitality, and the formation of local, national and transnational scales of belonging. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M1 - Hc;A4 M3 - 410497010 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016000942 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1925 T1 - Disordered surroundings : money and socio-economic exclusion in Western Kenya A1 - Schmidt,Mario Y1 - 2017/// KW - economic conditions KW - Kenya KW - language usage KW - market vendors KW - money KW - social classes RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 278 EP - 299 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2017), vol.87, no.2, p.278-299 : foto's. VL - 87 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article explores relations between ways of experiencing socio-economic disorder, strategies on how to deal with it, and monetary classifications that symbolize these ways and strategies. It assumes that we can learn something from the fact that the concept of 'pesa makech' (bitter money) has been replaced with the much more diffuse notion of 'pesa marach' (bad money) in Western Kenya during the last twenty-five years. This shift in how "negative forms" of money are discursively marked indexes a change in the way in which the people of Kaleko, a small market centre in Western Kenya, conceptualize the disorder of their surroundings. Instead of interpreting disorder as an effect of events taking place inside their sphere of influence, residents of Kaleko now predominantly situate the cause of disorder in actions of external actors that are perceived as uncontrollable: the "economy", money itself, politicians, members of other ethnic groups and untrustworthy Luo. This necessarily changes the ways in which disorder is tackled: while 'pesa makech' bitterness could be resolved by "sorting out" ('rieyo') the homestead's disorder, nowadays people employ other ways that aim at resolving disorder: upscaling 'rieyo' potential to the Kenyan nation; "struggling" ('chandre') through disorder; and relativizing 'rieyo' applicability. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M1 - Hc;E1 M3 - 410496995 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016000954 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1921 T1 - From sickness to history : evil spirits, memory and responsibility in an Ethiopian market village A1 - Boylston,Tom Y1 - 2017/// KW - capitalism KW - Ethiopia KW - spirits KW - world view RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 387 EP - 406 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2017), vol.87, no.2, p.387-406. VL - 87 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article discusses contemporary anxieties about 'buda' spirit attacks around a marketplace in Amhara region, Ethiopia. It asks how we get from the immediate experience of a 'buda' attack, an emotionally intense scene of sickness, fear and uncertainty, to a reflexive situation in which 'buda' becomes a vehicle for discussing and understanding deep historic concerns about market exchange. The author makes two main arguments: first, that apparent connections between spiritual attack and the spread of capitalism in fact reflect a deeper-lying opposition, on the part of landed elites, between moral hospitality and immoral exchange. Second, he shows how this historical consciousness develops from processes of verification and questioning through which immediate experiences of sickness and fear become interpretable as 'buda' attacks associated with particular human agents and historical relationships. The author argues that only by following this local epistemological work that we can understand how spirits become identifiable as historical agents within a web of other social relations. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M1 - Dd;Dd;C1 M3 - 410497037 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016001017 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1920 T1 - Inkatha's young militants : reconsidering political violence in South Africa A1 - Gibbs,Timothy Y1 - 2017/// KW - anti-apartheid resistance KW - generation conflicts KW - political violence KW - South Africa KW - townships KW - youth RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 362 EP - 386 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2017), vol.87, no.2, p.362-386. VL - 87 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - South Africa's township revolts have generated much excellent research on the central role played by rebellious, urban youth. This article explores a parallel set of intergenerational conflicts that opened up in the marginal rural districts of the Natal Midlands, which were exacerbated by apartheid's forced removals of labour tenants from commercial farming districts to crowded 'Native Reserves' in the 1970s. At this time of deepening poverty, elders worried about the rising incidence of juvenile petty crime, particularly amongst the teenagers who increasingly took itinerant, seasonal labour on the commercial farms. Some of these young migrants, unable to find steady factory work at a time of mounting unemployment, also played a leading role in the illicit, sometimes criminal networks of South Africa's growing popular economy. The author shows how some of these youths were mobilized by Inkatha during the war against the African National Congress in Johannesburg, often to the revulsion of older men who abhorred their socially harmful, thuggish violence, which spiralled uncontrollably along migrant routes. Thus the political violence was often known as the 'udlame': a brutal savagery that destroys households, communities and society. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M1 - Kf;C1 M3 - 410497045 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016001005 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1926 T1 - L'olivier de la sagesse A1 - Ennaji,Moha Y1 - 2017/// N1 - Op omslag: r‚cit Met noten KW - autobiographies (form) KW - Berber KW - biographies (form) KW - family KW - fathers KW - Morocco KW - prose (form) KW - social life RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 161 CY - Paris PB - Karthala U2 - w22 T3 - Lettres du Sud, ISSN 0989-8263 SN - 2-8111-1781-4 pbk AV - AFRIKA Lit.10655 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409235539 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1914 T1 - Localization of humanitarian assistance frameworks for East African pastoralists A1 - Konaka,Shinya A1 - Sun,Xiaogang Y1 - 2017/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten, samenvattingen KW - East Africa KW - Ethiopia KW - humanitarian assistance KW - hunter-gatherers KW - Kenya KW - pastoralists KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE PB - Center for African Area Studies, Kyoto University U2 - w22 T3 - African study monographs, Supplementary issue, ISSN 0286-9667 ; no. 53 N2 - This volume explores possibilities for the localization of humanitarian assistance frameworks with regard to East African pastoralists. It is based on the outcomes of the international workshop held in Shizuoka, Japan from December 10 to 11, 2015 under the title Reconsidering the Basic Human Needs for the East African Pastoralists: Towards the Localization of Humanitarian Assistance AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410624063 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/2433/218905 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1912 T1 - Mamie Denis : ‚vad‚e de la maison de retraite A1 - Ngalle Edimo,Christophe A1 - Danngar,Adjim Y1 - 2017/// KW - Chad KW - comic strips (form) KW - elderly women KW - France KW - migration RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 116 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - L'Harmattan BD N2 - Mamie Denis, vieille parisienne proc‚duriŠre, contestataire et raciste, choisit de finir sa vie en Afrique aprŠs avoir fugu‚ de la maison de retraite qui l'h‚berge. Car Mamie Denis veut vivre sa vie, malgr‚ les al‚as de la vieillesse. Et cela ne lui ‚tait plus possible … Paris 9Šme (son fief), du fait de la pression des services sociaux qui, aiguill‚s par Pat, le cupide neveu, ont fait d'elle une personne entiŠrement d‚pendante. Eh bien Pat n'aura pas l'h‚ritage tout de suite ! Et l'administration se perdra dans sa paperasse, car Mamie Denis a gard‚ de l'initiative et complot‚ son d‚part pour le Tchad avec ses anciens voisins africains, qui ont conserv‚ pour elle l'affection due aux aŒn‚s, mˆme si tout n'a pas ‚t‚ facile au d‚part entre eux et la vindicative mamie SN - 2-343-10130-2 pbk AV - AFRIKA Lit.10680 Y2 - 2017/01/06/ M3 - 410725463 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1918 T1 - Mauritania A1 - Dietz,Ton Y1 - 2017/// KW - Mauritania KW - postage stamps KW - postal services RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Leiden PB - African Studies Centre U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410498378 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46167 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46147 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46148 : http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46149 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1915 T1 - Natal A1 - Dietz,Ton Y1 - 2017/// KW - postage stamps KW - postal services KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Leiden PB - African Studies Centre U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410556009 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47011 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47012 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47015 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47016 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47017 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47018 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47019 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1924 T1 - Navigating (im)mobility : female entrepreneurship and social media in Khartoum A1 - Steel,Griet Y1 - 2017/// KW - social media KW - social relations KW - Sudan KW - women entrepreneurs RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 233 EP - 252 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2017), vol.87, no.2, p.233-252. VL - 87 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Through Facebook and other social media, a growing number of well-educated women in Khartoum are marketing and selling typically female personal care and beauty items online. These "tajirat al-Facebook" (or Facebook traders) are the new entrepreneurs of Sudan who work from home to run their businesses and widen their social circles. Relying on the urban infrastructure of mobile phones, delivery boys, digital connectivity and online platforms, they navigate public life from the intimate sphere of the home or harem to become successful businesswomen who continuously transcend conventional gender norms and classic divisions between public and private, online and offline, and work and family. By addressing the day-to-day socio-economic practices of these traders, this article casts innovative light upon the broader discussions surrounding the role of women in economic life in Africa. It is argued that the mobile phone, and the smartphone in particular, has opened up a range of opportunities for women to enhance their social and economic manoeuvring space and to negotiate power within, and beyond, the domestic realm. New communications technologies have paved the way for a new kind of entrepreneurship in which the commercial goals of profit making are intimately entwined with the broader practices of sociality and diversion from boredom. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. in English and French. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M1 - Dg;C4 M3 - 410497002 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016000930 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1916 T1 - Orange Free State/Orange River Colony A1 - Dietz,Ton Y1 - 2017/// KW - postage stamps KW - postal services KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Leiden PB - African Studies Centre U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410554529 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47009 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47010 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1909 T1 - Passages of culture : media and mediality in African societies A1 - F”rster,Till A1 - Schlehe,Judith Y1 - 2017/// KW - African identity KW - Cameroon KW - mobile telephone KW - Nigeria KW - popular culture KW - prophets KW - protest KW - radio KW - social media KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 3 EP - 90 JA - Journal of African Media Studies: (2017), vol.9, no.1, p.3-90 : ill. VL - 9 IS - 1 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - How do African cultures transform when they appropriate new media? The articles in this section interrogate basic questions related to the transformations that African societies currently go through when they are faced with new media. The findings presented are the outcome of an international research network that allowed African and European scholars to cooperate and to share their experiences with new media in field settings. Articles included: Controversies and restrictions of visual representation of prophets in northern Nigerian popular culture (Abdalla Uba Adamu); Intermediality of images: a semiotic analysis of the "Occupy Nigeria Protest" images on social media (Nura Ibrahim); Silences and the mediation of identities in South African radio talk shows (Jendele Hungbo); The man from where? Ukhozi FM and new identities on radio in South Africa (Liz Gunner); Closeness, distance and disappearances in Cameroonian mediated transnational social ties: uses of mobile phones and narratives of transformed identities (Primus M. Tazanu, Bettina Anja Frei). Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/02/06/ M1 - Ea;A4 M3 - 410801003 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1386/jams.9.1.3_1 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1922 T1 - Reconfiguring migration A1 - Thorsen,Dorte Y1 - 2017/// KW - Africa KW - attitudes KW - Cameroon KW - Ghana KW - human trafficking KW - Libya KW - migrants KW - migration KW - Morocco KW - return migration KW - social conditions RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 300 EP - 361 JA - Africa / International African Institute: (2017), vol.87, no.2, p.300-361 : ill. VL - 87 IS - 2 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This themed section of Africa is concerned with contemporary changes in mobility patterns in Africa. The editors pose that the present intersection of global politics of securitization and African everyday politics governed by inequality, disenchantment, survival and aspiration has accelerated changes in this area. Contributions in this section analyse the social effects of these changes. Contributions: Reconfiguring migration: an introduction (Dorte Thorsen); Why aspiring migrants trust migration brokers: the moral economy of departure in Anglophone Cameroon (Maybritt Jill Alpes); Disrupted migration projects: the moral economy of involuntary return to Ghana from Libya (Nauja Kleist); Is Europe really the dream? Contingent paths among sub-Saharan migrants in Morocco (Dorte Thorsen). Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. in English and French. [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M1 - Ba;C1;E4 M3 - 410497029 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016000966 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1919 T1 - Sahara A1 - Dietz,Ton Y1 - 2017/// KW - Ifni KW - Morocco KW - postage stamps KW - postal services KW - Spain KW - Western Sahara RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Leiden PB - African Studies Centre U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 41049772X L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46161 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46162 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46163 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46164 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46165 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1917 T1 - South Africa A1 - Dietz,Ton Y1 - 2017/// KW - postage stamps KW - postal services KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Leiden PB - African Studies Centre U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410554103 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47003 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47004 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47005 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47006 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47008 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47011 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47012 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47015 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47016 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47017 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47018 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47019 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47020 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46750 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46751 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46752 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47007 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/47008 http://hdl.handle.net/1887/46753 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1913 T1 - Special topic: "Plant uses, livelihoods, and sustainability in Africa" A1 - Fujioka,Yuichiro Y1 - 2017/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten, samenvattingen KW - Africa KW - feed KW - livestock KW - Namibia KW - plants KW - Senegal KW - Serer KW - sustainable development KW - Tanzania RP - NOT IN FILE PB - Center for African Area Studies, Kyoto University U2 - w22 T3 - African study monographs, ISSN 0285-1601 ; no. 38, no. 1 N2 - This special issue is part of the research outcome of the project Sustainability of Plant Utilization and Management of Local Vegetation in Globalizing Africa, which was started in 2015 by the Center for Integrated Area Studies (CIAS), Kyoto University. The aim of this project was to examine the sustainability of plant uses and local vegetation in Africa through comparative discussion of some case studies regarding landscape changes, vegetation management, and local knowledge of plant uses. In particular, we focused on the diversification of livelihood activities based on the use of local resources and ecosystems involved in the global dynamics of social and economic environments and examined how local activities or strategies affect the sustainability of plant resource uses. Contributions: Introduction to the Special Topic "Plant Uses, Livelihoods, and Sustainability in Africa" (Fujioka, Yuichiro); Variations in Mopane Vegetation and its Use by Local People: Comparison of Four Sites in Northern Namibia (Teshirogi, Koki, Yamashina, Chisato, Fujioka, Yuichiro); Changes and Local Adjustment in the Faidherbia Albida Use as Fodder and Fuelwood among the Sereer, Senegal (Hirai, Masaaki); Renewing Herds through Livestock Trades: Changes in Cattle Keeping under Population Pressure in the Mbozi Plateau, Tanzania (Yamamoto, Kana) AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410624292 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/2433/218894 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1911 T1 - The Nigeria-Biafra war, popular culture and agitation for sovereignty of a Biafran nation A1 - Julius-Adeoye,'Rantimi Jays Y1 - 2017/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 19-21. - Met noten, samenvatting KW - Nigeria KW - Nigerian-Biafran War KW - political action KW - popular culture KW - separatism RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Leiden PB - African Studies Centre U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - ASC working paper ; 138 N2 - The date 6 July 2017 marks the 50th anniversary of the war considered as one of the worst in recent human history, the Nigeria-Biafra war. My paper focuses on the representation of this war in popular culture with an emphasis on film, fictional and non-fictional literature. It interrogates the role that fictional and non-fictional narration play in the collective and individual memory of Nigerians in general and the Igbos in particular. It also looks at the link between the depiction of the war in popular culture and the renewed agitation for the nationhood of Biafra, as since the 2000s, there has been renewed campaigning by young people of Igbo ethnicity for the creation of the Republic of Biafra. This research particularly concentrates on two organizations that are involved in this struggle: the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) and the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB). It is my position that popular culture constitutes important material for the study and understanding of historical events and periods of time, while it also enhances our understanding of the ways in which these past events may have an influence in the present AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 410741345 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/1887/49113 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1910 T1 - [Portrait de] Gamal Abdel Nasser A1 - Foka,Alain A1 - Nasser,Gamal Abdel Y1 - 2017/// N1 - Frans gesproken. - Uitzenddata: 22 april 2017, 29 april 2017, 6 mei 2017, 13 mei 2017 Bevat: Gamal Abdel Nasser et la conquˆte du pouvoir (1&2) ; Gamal Abdel Nasser et le Conseil de la R‚volution (3&4) ; Gamal Abdel Nasser, le chantre du panarabisme (5&6) ; Gamal Abdel Nasser, un pr‚sident hyperactif (7&8) KW - biographies (form) KW - Egypt KW - heads of State KW - politicians KW - radio broadcasts (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 1 CY - [Paris] PB - Radio France Internationale U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 T3 - Archives d'Afrique N2 - Cette ‚mission radio pr‚sent‚e par Alain Foka d‚crit la vie de Gamal Abdel Nasser en utilisant des archives sonores et des t‚moignages des acteurs encore vivants. Gamal Abdel Nasser Hussein, n‚ le 15 janvier 1918 … Alexandrie et mort le 28 septembre 1970 au Caire, est un homme d'tat ‚gyptien. Il fut le second pr‚sident de la R‚publique d'gypte de 1956 … sa mort AV - Online resource Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 410759333 L3 - http://www.rfi.fr/emission/20170422-gamal-abdel-nasser-conquete-pouvoir- 12 http://www.rfi.fr/emission/20170429-gamal-abdel-nasser-le-conseil- revolution-34 http://www.rfi.fr/emission/20170204-ange-felix-patasse-conquete-pouvoir- 5-68 http://www.rfi.fr/emission/20170513-gamal-abdel-nasser-president- hyperactif-78 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1954 T1 - Between 'artificial economics' and the 'discipline of the market' : Sasol from parastatal to privatisation A1 - Sparks,Stephen Y1 - 2016/// KW - chemical industry KW - economic history KW - enterprises KW - petroleum industry KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 711 EP - 724 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.711-724. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article explores the history of South Africa's oil-from-coal project, Sasol, the petro-chemical company central to apartheid South Africa's response to oil sanctions. Contrary to popular perception, South African interest in synthetic fuel pre-dates anti-apartheid sanctions. Anglovaal, a private mining company, acquired rights to the German Fischer-Tropsch process for converting coal into liquid fuel in the 1930s, and its subsidiary, SATMAR, converted torbanite into petrol and was an important precursor to Sasol. Like Germany, South Africa possessed no indigenous source of oil, and dependence on imports came to be seen as a strategic and economic vulnerability. Afrikaner nationalist reluctance to commit moneys to Anglovaal to build an oil-from-coal plant led to Sasol's establishment as a parastatal. Even so, this article argues, the project possessed enough 'Smutsian feature' to attract criticism from Afrikaner nationalists.The low cost of black labour in the early apartheid era was important to the project's initial financial viability, but the article argues that it was the state's interventions to regulate the fuel market, discipline the oil multinationals and massively subsidise oil-from-coal which saved the project from obsolescence. Energetic management also mattered: with low oil prices preventing oil-from-coal expansion during the 1960s, Sasol leveraged state support to facilitate diversification into the wider petro-chemical industry. After Sharpeville, Sasol spearheaded South Africa's increasingly isolationist oil strategy, while, at the same time, Sasol managers became increasingly defensive about their dependence on state support. Sasol's privatisation in 1979 was, however, precipitated by the need to fund two massive new oil-from-coal plants in the aftermath of the oil shock and Iranian revolution to meet the apartheid state's strategic priorities. Sasol's new hybrid identity as a company with private shareholders enjoying public subsidies continues to be controversial. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Kf;E6 M3 - 405362382 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1186787 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1957 T1 - Brazilian cities in Mozambique : South-South development co-operation or the projection of soft power? A1 - Nganje,Fritz Y1 - 2016/// KW - Brazil KW - Mozambique KW - South-South relations KW - technical cooperation KW - towns RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 659 EP - 674 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.659-674. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article analyses the technical co-operation between Brazilian cities and their Mozambican counterparts against the backdrop of the growing assertiveness of cities in the global economy and the resurgence of South-South co-operation. It argues that widespread global interest in Brazil's relative success in socio-economic transformation, coupled with Brazil's quest for global recognition and leadership has propelled the country's cities to the status of providers of technical assistance in Africa. While the city-to-city dimension of Brazil's technical co-operation may have contributed to the positive image and good will that Brazil enjoys in both Africa and the wider global community, it also raises questions about the developmental value of the Brazilian model of development co-operation. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Jc;E2 M3 - 405362358 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1189656 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1937 T1 - Censorship or self-control? Hate speech, the state and the voter in the Kenyan election of 2013 A1 - Bowman,Warigia M. A1 - Bowman,J.David Y1 - 2016/// KW - censorship KW - elections KW - freedom of speech KW - Kenya KW - propaganda KW - social media RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 495 EP - 531 JA - The Journal of Modern African Studies: (2016), vol.54, no.3, p.495-531 : tab. VL - 54 IS - 3 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - In 2013, the Kenyan government adopted a hybrid censorship strategy that relied on regulation, the presence of a strong security state, and the willingness of Kenyans to self-censor. The goal of this censorship strategy was to ensure a peaceful election. This study examines two issues. First, it investigates steps taken by the Kenyan government to minimise hate speech. Second, it explores how efforts to minimise hate speech affected citizen communications over SMS during the 2013 election. An initial round of qualitative data was gathered (n = 101) through a structured exit interview administered election week. A statistically significant, representative sample of quantitative data was gathered by a reputable Kenyan polling firm (n Ge¥ 2000). Both sets of empirical data indicate that Kenyan citizens cooperated in large part with efforts to limit political speech. Yet speech was not always completely 'peaceful'. Rather, voters used electronic media to insult, offend, and express contentious political views as well as express peace speech. This study argues that the empirical evidence suggests hate speech over text messages during the Kenyan election declined between 2008 and 2013. App., bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Hc;D2 M3 - 410499277 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X16000380 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1952 T1 - Children for Ewes : child indenture in the post-emancipation Great Karoo: c. 1856-1909 A1 - van Sittert,Lance Y1 - 2016/// KW - 1850-1899 KW - child labour KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 743 EP - 762 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.743-762 : ill., graf., tab. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - While the employment of child labour in the Cape Colony under slavery is well known, the same cannot be said for the post-emancipation period, despite the hinge masters and servants ordinance of 1841 governing the new free labour market legitimating employment of two categories of child labour: those indentured by their parents, and 'destitute children' indentured by the state. Both groups left paper trails. That of destitute children is easier to follow because they had to be advertised in the press, but a few scattered sets of contracts of 'indenture of apprenticeship by parents' (IAP) survive in the archives of the colonial magistrates. The article offers a close reading of the destitute children advertisements and IAP contract archive for one such magistracy: that of Colesberg in the Great Karoo in the second half of the 19th century. It traces patterns in the aggregate demography, form and features of the more than 250 IAP contracts signed in the magistracy over this period to demonstrate the gendered nature of child indenture, its relation to and dampening effect on adult wage rates, and its contributions to reproducing proletarian households in the commercialising pastoral economy of the Great Karoo. In so doing, it troubles two prevailing assumptions about the post-emancipation Cape labour market: that settler employers dictated the terms of exchange through coercion, and that the proletarian household was a haven from such exploitation. It detects evidence for both the patrimonial exchange and parental exploitation of proletarian children. Finally, the article offers a corrective to the scholarship on the invention of colonial childhood in the final quarter of the 19th century, based exclusively on the white middle-class experience of the south-western Cape, by suggesting that post-emancipation black childhood was without formal education or indolent adolescence, but rather an apprenticeship in labour. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Kf;L3 M3 - 405362404 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1199394 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1956 T1 - Commonwealth, bargains and influence : British atomic relations vis- -vis South Africa, 1955-1956 A1 - Asuelime,Lucky E. Y1 - 2016/// KW - geopolitics KW - Great Britain KW - international relations KW - political history KW - South Africa KW - uranium RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 675 EP - 686 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.675-686. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - At a time when uranium commanded attraction and became a currency for powerful states enmeshed in the Cold War, South Africa was courted, since its uranium was a commodity needed for both peaceful and military purposes by these principal state actors. J.D.L. Moore and G. Berridge gave two contrasting explanations for the British role in atomic South Africa in 1955 and 1956. The former claims that Britain was inevitably more modestly influential than the Americans. The latter claims that British anxiety about future deliveries of South African uranium forced it to make major concessions, such as the handover of Simon's Town. I argue that both claims are incorrect. On the first claim, the output of South African uranium was determined largely by the US, through the mechanism of the Combined Development Agency. On the second claim, South Africa was in such a precarious situation that it was impossible for it to use its uranium for so much leverage. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Kf;L3 M3 - 405362366 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1189276 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1930 T1 - Day-to-day accumulation of indigenous ecological knowledge : a case study of pastoral Maasai children in Southern Kenya A1 - Tian,Xiaojie Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum KW - children KW - ecology KW - indigenous knowledge KW - Kenya KW - Maasai KW - pastoralists RP - NOT IN FILE JA - African Study Monographs: (2016), vol.37, no.2, p.75-102 : fig., krt., tab. VL - 37 U2 - w22 N2 - This study focuses on pastoral Maasai children in Kenya with the goal of understanding the processes by which children accumulate Indigenous Ecological Knowledge (IEK) in the context of their current social and natural environment. I examine how children accumulate IEK through their participation in livestock management activities in a Maasai village on the Kuku Group Ranch in southern Kenya. In addition to attending school, Maasai children participate in different pastoral chores as part of their daily routines. Participation in these activities is gradual and involves observation, helping with tasks, and direct action, according to the individual developmental stage of the child and established Maasai gender-age roles. At about 2 years of age, children begin to participate in pastoral chores, starting with easy tasks such as livestock herd separation and gathering. Children 10 years of age and older independently take part in pastoral chores that require comprehensive IEK utilization. A high frequency of daily participation in livestock management shows childrens willingness to become a qualified Maasai adult. My findings indicate that a childs participation in formal education does not necessarily result in a decrease in in situ pastoral IEK accumulation, as long as the child is actively participating in pastoral chore routines AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 410579831 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1932 T1 - Der Verfassungsgerichtshof der Republik Gabun A1 - Parashu,Dimitrios A1 - Kotz‚,Louis J. Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Fussnoten, Zsfg. auf Englisch KW - constitutional courts KW - constitutional law KW - Gabon RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Verfassung und Recht in šbersee VL - 4 U2 - w22 SN - 0506-7286 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 410567760 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1947 T1 - Dynamiques urbaines … Alger : la (re)fabrication de la ville en questions A1 - Srir,Mohamed A1 - Abdelatif,Isma Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten Pr‚face : La ville n'est pas une addition / Amine Benaissa -- Introduction / Mohamed Srir -- partie 1. Repr‚senter les mutations urbaines : relectures, tensions et politiques d'action. La scŠne et les coulisses : lumiŠre sur les espaces int‚rieurs du tissu r‚sidentiel ancien dans la commune d'Alger centre / Abdennour Oukaci -- La ville d'Alger … l'heure du "Plan de Constantine" / Ahmed El-Amine Benbernou -- Am‚nager les espaces verts et m‚nager l'image d'Alger : repr‚sentations en tension / Anna Rouadjia -- La croissance urbaine et ses impacts sur l'environnement … Alger : approche par la notion de "capacit‚ de charge" / Mohamed Hocine -- La capacit‚ de charge touristique des zones c“tiŠres alg‚roises : essai d'‚valuation sur la ZET de Z‚ralda / Isma Abdelatif. -- partie 2. Am‚nager de nouveaux territoires : modŠles urbains, approches et outils de mise en oeuvre. De la planification strat‚gique au projet urbain : quel modŠle pour Alger? / Djamal Eddine Bouragba -- La requalification des espaces urbains comme moteur de reconquˆte des territoires en perte de vitalit‚ : quelles approches … Alger? / Mehdi Bennai -- Concevoir des ‚coquartiers … Alger? De l'exp‚rimentation aux enjeux de durabilit‚ / Mohamed Srir -- La r‚sidentialisation : un dispositif de renouvellement urbain dans les grands ensembles -- cas de Bab Ezzouar -- / Amina Benameur -- L'in-adh‚rence spatiale du tramway d'Alger … l'‚chelle locale / Aniss Mouad Mezoued -- Principe de pr‚caution : ‚clairage d'une situation … risque autour du CET de la commune d'Ouled Fayet / Fay‡al Benachour. -- Postface : La recherche en urbanisme : … la recherche du temps perdu / Ewa Berezowska-Azzag. KW - Algeria KW - capitals KW - urban planning KW - urban renewal RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 288 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Colloques & rencontres SN - 2-343-08146-8 pbk AV - AFRIKA 51499 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M1 - Cb;J1 M3 - 408134496 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1933 T1 - Environmental justice and slow violence : Marikana and the post-apartheid South African mining industry in context A1 - Soyapi,Caiphas A1 - Kotz‚,Louis J. Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Notes, ref., sum KW - environmental policy KW - miners KW - mining companies KW - political repression KW - social justice KW - South Africa KW - strikes RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Verfassung und Recht in šbersee VL - 4 U2 - w22 SN - 0506-7286 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 410567728 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1943 T1 - FrontiŠres maritimes et revendications ‚tatiques dans le Golfe du Guin‚e : du cas du Gabon et de la Guin‚e Equatoriale A1 - Moundounga Mouity,Patrice Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Bibliogr., r‚s. en fran‡ais et en anglais KW - boundaries KW - Equatorial Guinea KW - Gabon KW - geopolitics KW - islands KW - territorial claims RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Revue juridique et politique des tats francophones: (2016), ann‚e 70, no.2, p.187-212 : foto's, krt. VL - 70 U2 - w22 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 409783102 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1946 T1 - L'espace urbain dans le roman africain francophone A1 - Preira,Jospeh Ahimann Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 343-361. - Met indices, noten KW - Central Africa KW - French language KW - literature KW - novels KW - towns KW - urban life KW - West Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 379 CY - Saarbrcken PB - ditions universitaires europ‚ennes U2 - w22 N2 - Le thŠme de la ville est, depuis fort peu, omnipr‚sent dans les productions litt‚raires africaines. Depuis l'‚poque coloniale jusqu'… nos jours, il figure dans bon nombre de romans africains. Le roman ‚tant consid‚r‚ comme le genre le plus apte … repr‚senter les r‚alit‚s quotidiennes, chaque romancier choisi de repr‚senter la ville selon le point pr‚cis qu'il veut mettre en exergue. Cette vision de la ville inspire le choix du sujet portant sur la repr‚sentation de la ville dans les romans africains depuis la phase coloniale jusqu'… nos jours. Le choix ‚tant port‚ sur une vingt deux romans africains, l'‚tude de ces romans montre que l'espace de la ville change selon les auteurs et devient un espace de rˆve, de perversion et d‚sillusion. Le choix des m‚thodes comparatistes, th‚matiques et sociocritiques nous aura permis de mieux percevoir l'image de la ville africaine au cours des ann‚es SN - 978-3-8416-1078-2 AV - AFRIKA 51888 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 409033200 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1941 T1 - L'influence du droit communautaire sur le systŠme de contr“le de finances publiques au Cameroun : … propos des directives CEMAC du 10 d‚cembre 2011 A1 - Dieya Kamdom,Yves Gabriel Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Notes, r‚f., r‚s. en fran‡ais et en anglais KW - Cameroon KW - Communaut‚ conomique et Mon‚taire de l'Afrique Centrale KW - public finance RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 247 EP - 270 JA - Revue juridique et politique des tats francophones: (2016), ann‚e 70, no.2, p.247-270. VL - 70 IS - 2 U2 - w22 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 409783285 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1949 T1 - La politique fiscale au Cameroun depuis les ann‚es 1980 A1 - Evina Obam,Richard Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Revision of author's thesis (doctoral)--Universit‚ Aix-Marseille, 2014 Bibliogr.: p. 369-406. - Met index, noten KW - Cameroon KW - fiscal policy RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 417 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Finances publiques N2 - La fragmentation de la politique fiscale camerounaise depuis les ann‚es 80 s'opŠre dans un environnement caract‚ris‚ par une ‚rosion du monopole ‚tatique et une atomisation du processus d‚cisionnel avec en toile de fond, l'extran‚it‚ grandissante des probl‚matiques. Ainsi, l'apparente coh‚sion de la politique fiscale s'‚tiole avec la dispersion institutionnelle issue du jeu concurrentiel entre l'ex‚cutif et le l‚gislatif, pouvoirs constitutionnels supplant‚s par l'activisme des forces sociales diffuses. Le 'd‚sordre normatif' issu de l'‚clatement des instruments de l'ordre juridique s'exacerbe, la codification demeurant lacunaire et non exhaustive. Les choix fiscaux de sortie de crise cŠdent la place … une r‚flexion sur une politique fiscale de d‚veloppement restituant … l'tat la pl‚nitude de ses pr‚rogatives. Avec l'avŠnement de l'‚conomie globalis‚e, la politique fiscale, produit des processus d'int‚gration et des r‚seaux conventionnels, arbore une posture offensive ou d‚fensive de l'tat mˆme si ce dernier continue de tenir jalousement le gouvernail de la d‚cision fiscale. C'est l'avŠnement d'un l'tat fiscal post-moderne imaginatif, recherchant des solutions ad‚quates, devant r‚concilier les exigences de la ponction fiscale … des fins budg‚taires avec l'atteinte des objectifs de d‚veloppement. C'est un tat intelligent f‚d‚rant les acteurs impliqu‚s dans la construction d'un nouvel ordre fiscal et assumant par sa r‚silience, l'apolarit‚ d'une politique fiscale coh‚rente … travers la quˆte permanente d'une unit‚ conceptuelle du processus d‚cisionnel public SN - 2-343-06712-0 pbk AV - AFRIKA 51563 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 408122366 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1940 T1 - Le droit de grƒce du pr‚sident de la R‚publique en Afrique noire francophone A1 - Edimo,Fran‡ois Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Notes, r‚f KW - amnesty KW - constitutional law KW - French-speaking Africa KW - heads of State RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 271 EP - 284 JA - Revue juridique et politique des tats francophones: (2016), ann‚e 70, no.2, p.271-284. VL - 70 IS - 2 U2 - w22 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 409783420 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1927 T1 - Nigeria : 'bullets were raining everywhere' : deadly repression of pro-Biafra activists Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Index: AIN 411/002/2016 Met noten, Engelse samenvatting KW - detention KW - Nigeria KW - offences against human rights KW - political violence KW - protest RP - NOT IN FILE CY - London PB - Amnesty International U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 N2 - Executive summary. -- Research methodology. -- Background. -- Legal framework. -- Extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killing. -- A pattern of excessive use of force. -- Torture and other ill-treatment. -- Unlawful arrest and detention. -- No investigation, prosecution or remedy. -- Recommendations. Since August 2015, the security forces have killed at least 150 members and supporters of the pro-Biafran organization IPOB (Indigenous People of Biafra) and injured hundreds during non-violent meetings, marches and other gatherings. This report focuses on the crisis brewing in the southeast of Nigeria, where IPOB campaigns for an independent state of Biafra. It documents extrajudicial executions and the use of excessive force by military, police and other security agencies. It also shows a worrying pattern of arbitrary arrests and detentions, including soldiers arresting wounded victims in hospital, and of torture and other ill-treatment of detainees AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410738514 L3 - https://www.amnesty.nl/content/uploads/2017/02/AFR4452112016ENGLISH.pdf? x82182 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1951 T1 - No exit? : emigration policy and the consolidation of Apartheid A1 - Shapiro,Karin A. Y1 - 2016/// KW - 1950-1959 KW - 1960-1969 KW - emigration KW - government policy KW - National Party KW - South Africa KW - travel RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 763 EP - 781 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.763-781. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Emigration policy in post-1948 South Africa functioned as both a tool of oppression and a safety valve, at once a mechanism to punish Apartheid's staunchest political opponents and a mechanism for dissipating white opposition to National Party policies. This article examines the National Party's policy toward emigration in the 1950s and 1960s, exploring the role of travel documents in the evolving National Party strategy for maintaining, and even extending, its control over internal political opponents. At no point, however, could the Minister of the Interior simply impose his will without facing innovative challenges to the law. Anti-apartheid figures repeatedly sought to test emigration provisions in the courts and nullify their effects. The Government developed its emigration policy by deciding individual applications on a case-by-case basis, rather than articulating 'coherent' public guidelines. It further believed that citizens did not have a right to a passport and that travellers constituted 'quasi-diplomats'. This formulation, along with the requirement that black South Africans provide a substantial deposit before travelling abroad, speaks to the apartheid Government's complex notions of racially based citizenship. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Kf;L3 M3 - 405362412 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1186784 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1960 T1 - Organised crime in late apartheid and the transition to a new criminal order : the rise and fall of the Johannesburg 'bouncer mafia' A1 - Shaw,Mark A1 - Haysom,Simone Y1 - 2016/// KW - 1980-1989 KW - 1990-1999 KW - drug trafficking KW - organized crime KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.577-594 : krt. VL - 42 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The Johannesburg bouncer mafia, a series of violent and competing groups, dominated the city's underworld from the late 1980s until the early 2000s. While the bouncer mafia was one of several emerging criminal networks at the time, although the most prominent in respect of Johannesburg's changing illicit drug economy, they provide a useful example of how organised crime originated during South Africa's transition: a fact often commented on, but little understood. A study of the bouncer mafia may yield important conclusions for the rise and fall of criminal groups. Informed by the experience of members themselves, this account provides an opportunity to study the conditions under which organised crime groups take root during periods of political, economic and social transition, including how such groups recruit, consolidate, compete and how they may decline and be replaced. The narrative is told in three phases, their growth, consolidation, transition and decline.The Johannesburg bouncer mafia was born out of a set of tough, white, working-class boxing and sports clubs in Hillbrow and south and east Johannesburg. Sharing a background of apartheid-era military service, the bouncers evolved from independent 'heavies' into a set of registered private security companies competing for turf and control of the illicit drug trade. Changes in the prevailing political and socio-economic environment of the country during the transition to democracy were reflected in structural changes in the city's night-time economy; this led to the consolidation of the bouncer mafia, which, by early 2000, had concentrated into one company, Elite, assuming almost complete control of protection of the drug trade in clubs. A series of prevalent factors and changes in the industry precipitated the dramatic decline of the bouncer mafia: socio-economic transition altered not only the racial profile of key areas, but also the face of policing, resulting in a weakening of the networks between bouncers and the police. The increasing recruitment of African bouncers by clubs themselves - primarily from Congo and Nigeria, they were cheaper than their white counterparts, more easily available when the former white bouncer recruitment networks dried up, and less prone to violence - facilitated a shift in control of the city's drug trade to Nigerian criminal networks, thereby laying the foundation for a critical component of modern organised crime in Johannesburg. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Kf;L3 M3 - 405362323 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1186859 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1935 T1 - Peace from below: governance and peacebuilding in Kerio Valley, Kenya A1 - Elfversson,Emma Y1 - 2016/// KW - governance KW - Kenya KW - peacebuilding RP - NOT IN FILE JA - The Journal of Modern African Studies: (2016), vol.54, no.3, p.469-493 : krt. VL - 54 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Under what circumstances can non-state actors become successful local peacemakers? A growing body of research documents the involvement of non-state actors in local conflict resolution in Africa. However, there is large variation in such actors' power, legitimacy, and ultimately their ability to contribute to conflict resolution. The ways in which contextual and dynamic factors at local and national levels, and in particular the relationship between non-state and state actors and institutions, affect local conflict resolution are not sufficiently understood. To address this gap, this paper analyses the peace process addressing a long-standing conflict in Kerio Valley, Kenya. The analysis illustrates how the failure of the state to provide security and basic services led non-state actors to fill important roles in governance. Through this process, they were endowed with legitimacy and power which enabled them to play key roles in a peace process that led to a mutually acceptable peace agreement. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Hc;D2 M3 - 410499293 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X16000227 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1948 T1 - Probl‚matique de l'application de la TVA dans l'espace OHADA A1 - Onanga Opissina,Vianney Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 320-[353]. - Met index, noten KW - Africa KW - economic integration KW - OHADA KW - value added tax RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 370 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Finances publiques N2 - La TVA est par nature une taxe dont l'assiette est large, pr‚lev‚e sur les ventes jusqu'au stade de la fabrication inclus, avec un droit syst‚matique … d‚duction de la taxe pay‚e sur tous les achats. La TVA est per‡ue … chaque stade de la production, pour s'assurer qu'elle ne pŠse que sur la consommation. De ce fait elle garantit la neutralit‚ fiscale. Cette vision de la TVA est pourtant remise en cause dans le contexte des tats de l'O.H.A.D.A, car le systŠme de TVA actuellement applicable dans ces pays africains pose de nombreux problŠmes et comporte des obstacles co–teux pour les op‚rateurs ‚conomiques, notamment parce qu'il comporte trop de diff‚rences de traitement, qui se traduisent par plusieurs distorsions ‚conomiques et fiscales qui sont en totale contradiction avec l'id‚e du march‚ commun. Aussi, l'harmonisation de cet imp“t est apparue ˆtre l'une des strat‚gies fiscales incontournables permettant d'am‚liorer le systŠme actuel et ‚liminer les obstacles et les risques accrus de fraude qu'il induit. Mais devant la r‚sistance des tats membres … c‚der une partie de leur comp‚tence fiscale aux institutions communautaires, acteurs comp‚tents en matiŠre de TVA, cet instrument d'int‚gration r‚gionale reste au sein des tats de l'O.H.A.D.A, dans un ‚tat de stagnation, qui met en p‚ril l'imp‚ratif d'instituer un systŠme commun de TVA ; lequel se pr‚sente comme le stade d'achŠvement du processus d'harmonisation. Aussi, il faudra une volont‚ d‚termin‚e des tats membres pour dynamiser le processus d'harmonisation de cet imp“t SN - 2-343-04645-X AV - AFRIKA 51562 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 408122412 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1942 T1 - R‚flexion sur les r‚visions constitutionnelles en Afrique noire francophone de 1990 … 2014 : le cas du Congo, du Tchad et du Togo A1 - Galebay,Abira Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Notes, r‚f., r‚s. en fran‡ais et en anglais KW - Chad KW - constitutional amendments KW - constitutional law KW - constitutions KW - Democratic Republic of Congo KW - French-speaking Africa KW - Togo RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 213 EP - 246 JA - Revue juridique et politique des tats francophones: (2016), ann‚e 70, no.2, p.213-246. VL - 70 IS - 2 U2 - w22 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 409783218 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1950 T1 - Reforms and Nigerian labour and employment relations : perspectives, issues and challenges A1 - Otobo,Dafe Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. [463]-479. - Met noten KW - economic development KW - employment KW - industrial development KW - labour KW - Nigeria KW - trade unions KW - working conditions RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 479 CY - Lagos [etc.] PB - Malthouse Press U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This collective volume deals with aspects of economic reform, labour and employment relations, human resource management and workers' rights in Nigeria. Contributions: The idea of reform (Dafe Otobo); Industrial and labour issues in policy formulation (Ben E. Kanyip); Regulatory instruments and industrial relations in Nigeria (Ifeanyi P. Onyeonoru); Measuring the democratic rights of Nigerian workers by international standards (O.V.C. Okenne); Contemporary developments in human resource management: implications for performance enhancement and service delivery in Nigeria's modern sector (Segun Matanmi); Bank sector recapitalisation: matters arising for labour and Nigerian society (Oluwatoyin Frederick Idowu); Pricing of petroleum products in Nigeria (Peter I. Ozo-Eson); Economic reforms in Nigeria: an analysis of employment generation in telecommunication sector (Muhammed Muttaka Usman); Information communication technology, productivity of labour and the development of the Nigerian economy (Chukwuemeka Ifegwu-Eke); Economic reforms, labour market institutions and poverty reduction in Nigeria (S.A. Abdulsalam); Response of organised labour to economic reforms in Nigeria (Yusuf Noah); The trade union movement and the challenges of economic reforms in the emerging Nigerian economy (K.O. Kester, A.R. Bankole, O.S. Samuel); Between rhetoric and action: the Nigerian working class and neo-liberal economic policies (Funmi Adewumi); Host communities and businesses: implications for labour relations and human resource management (Dafe Otobo); On unfair labour practices in the oil and gas industry (NUPENG & Olawale Afolabi); Reforms, industrial and employment relations in Nigeria: perspectives, issues and challenges (Pengassan & Bayo Olowoshile); What about industrial relations? (Issa Aremu); Reforming employment and labour relations in Nigeria (Chris Obisi); Labour and legal challenges in redundancy and some other employment practices in Nigeria (Israel N.E. Worugji); Employment and work relations in university system in Nigeria (Dafe Otobo); Human resources management in Nigerian security services (Etannibi Alemika); Trade unions and industrial relations practice in the health sector (Baba Ayelabola); Feminist perspective of workers' rights and labour standards in Nigeria (Asikia Ige (nee Karibi-Whyte)); Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) in perspective (Ibrahim Wakawa); Current issues and trends in effective arbitration (Ben B. Kanyip); Overview of the Trade Disputes Act and its application to trade disputes settlement in Nigeria (Ben B. Kanyip); Constitutionalization of the status of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria: a panacea for industrial harmony? (Offornze Amucheazi). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-94971-1-3 AV - AFRIKA 51160 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Fn;E4 M3 - 407671366 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1938 T1 - Seeking exposure: conversions of scientific knowledge in an African city A1 - Aellah,Gemma A1 - Geissler,P.Wenzel Y1 - 2016/// KW - Africa KW - applied sciences KW - medical research KW - urban life RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 389 EP - 417 JA - The Journal of Modern African Studies: (2016), vol.54, no.3, p.389-417. VL - 54 IS - 3 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Transnational medical research has become a common feature in many parts of Africa. This paper explores the contribution such activity makes to the social and economic lives of those involved, including both trial subjects and local staff. By considering the value of the 'exposure' that involvement brings to staff and research participants, we reflect on the conversion of scientific knowledge into practical knowledge and its value to sustaining precarious livelihoods in an economically fragile city. We consider the interplay between science and sociality and argue for a need to take seriously the circulation of scientific knowledge beyond the confines of expert spaces. Bibliogr., notes, sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Ba;I1 M3 - 410499269 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X16000240 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1931 T1 - Social cohesion against xenophobic tension : a case study of Yeoville, Johannesburg A1 - Abe,Toshihiro A1 - Katsaura,Obvious Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Bibliogr., notes, sum KW - immigrants KW - social integration KW - South Africa KW - xenophobia RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 55 EP - 73 JA - African Study Monographs: (2016), vol.37, no.2, p.55-73. VL - 37 IS - 2 U2 - w22 N2 - Since 2008's xenophobic disturbances, living together has once again become an urgent agenda for South Africa, especially in sharply multi-ethnic urban milieus. Scholars and practitioners have attempted to identify both the causes of and possible preventative measures for these xenophobic outbreaks by discussing such topics as rising food and commodity prices, high unemployment rates, and lack of local leadership. However, these inquiries have been unable to identify what mechanism in areas with a heavy migrant presence may prevent a retreat into violent conflict. This paper focuses on the networks and activities of local civil societies of Yeoville, including migrant organisations, and explores what alternatives are functioning to mitigate and regulate lingering tension among locals. From observing the activities of "streetlevel mediators" without official power or status, particularly their indirect intervention into potential sites of conflict, this case study submits the following arguments within the theoretical context of the social cohesion debate that: 1) the concept of control may not befit attempts to counter exclusionist movements in sharply diverse situations, and 2) the catalytic actor can be effective in a context characterised by multiple centres of power AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/31/ M3 - 410579629 L3 - http://hdl.handle.net/2433/215711 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1955 T1 - South Africa and Iran in the apartheid era A1 - Chehabi,H.E. Y1 - 2016/// KW - international relations KW - Iran KW - political history KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 687 EP - 709 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.687-709. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This article analyses the multifaceted relations between apartheid-era South Africa and Iran. In 1942, the exile of Iran's ex-Shah in Johannesburg put South Africa on the map of Iran's rulers. In the 1970s, close economic and military ties were established between the two states, based on economic complementarities and shared concern with the threat of communism and Soviet penetration into the Indian Ocean. By 1978, Iran provided over 90 per cent of South Africa's oil. These ties did not prevent the Iranians from denouncing apartheid or bending its rules when in South Africa. The Islamic revolution of 1979 caused a break in formal relations. It affected South Africa in two ways: oil imports were disrupted, and it contributed to the growing militancy of South African Muslims in the anti-apartheid struggle. Iran then made financial contributions to the ANC, resulting in a friendly resumption of ties after the end of apartheid. The article uses extensive interviews with South African and Iranian diplomats who served in both countries. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Kf;L3 M3 - 405362374 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1201330 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1929 T1 - Special issue: Durban and Cape Town as port cities : reconsidering Southern African Studies from the Indian Ocean A1 - Hofmeyr,Isabel A1 - Dhupelia-Mesthrie,Uma A1 - Kaarsholm,Preben Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Met bijl., noten, samenvattingen KW - crime novels KW - immigrants KW - Indian Ocean KW - Indians KW - international trade KW - slave trade KW - South Africa KW - Southern Africa RP - NOT IN FILE PB - Routledge U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Journal of Southern African studies, ISSN 1465-3893 ; vol. 42, no. 3 N2 - This special issue arose out of a workshop titled 'Durban and Cape Town as Indian Ocean port cities : reconsidering Southern African Studies from the Indian Ocean', held at the University of the Western Cape in September 2014. The collection explores the effect of pre-colonial Indian Ocean slave and trade networks on southern African colonial formations. These re-configured geographies, in turn, open up possibilities for drawing new linkages among different southern African historiographies. The articles articulate land- and sea-based systems of labour migration and control, suggesting connections between the inland historiographies of mining and migration, on the one hand, and maritime port cities, on the other (and indeed, between these port cities themselves). The volume raises questions of method and scale, and the introduction touches on problems associated with an oceanic approach (how to factor in the 'sea-ness of the sea'). Contributions: Durban and Cape Town as port cities: reconsidering Southern African Studies from the Indian Ocean (Isabel Hofmeyr, Uma Dhupelia-Mesthrie & Preben Kaarsholm); Indian Ocean slaves in Cape Town, 1695-1807 (Nigel Worden); Mozambique Island, Cape Town and the organisation of the slave trade in the South-West Indian Ocean, c.1797-1807 (Patrick Harries); Convicts, carcerality and Cape Colony connections in the 19th century (Clare Anderson); Indian Ocean networks and the transmutations of servitude: the potector of Indian Immigrants and the administration of freed slaves and indentured labourers in Durban in the 1870s (Preben Kaarsholm); Betwixt the Oceans: the chief immigration officer in Cape Town, Clarence Wilfred Cousins (1905-1915) (Uma Dhupelia-Mesthrie); The Gold Kings: Son smugglers in Johannesburg, Durban and Louren‡o Marques, 1890s-1920s (Andrew MacDonald); Family, gender, and mobility among passenger migrants into colonial Natal: the story of Moosa Hajee Cassim (c.1840s-1921) (Goolam Vahed); Rendering the Cape-as-port: Sea-Mountain,Cape of Storms/Good Hope, Adamastor and local-world literary formations (Meg Samuelson); 'The darker side of Durban': South African crime Fiction and Indian Ocean underworlds (Charne Lavery); The politics of conservation in Southern Africa (Andreas Scheba). [ASC Leiden abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Ka;L2;L3 M3 - 410694819 L3 - http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjss20/42/3 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1928 T1 - Sub£rbios and cityness : exploring imbrications and urbanity in Maputo, Mozambique A1 - Roque,Sandra A1 - Mucavele,Miguel A1 - Noronha,Nair Y1 - 2016/// KW - housing KW - Mozambique KW - social relations KW - suburban areas KW - urban life RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 642 EP - 658 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.642-658. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, shows profound spatial, social, and economic differentiation built on the legacy of colonial structures of inequality. After Mozambiques independence from Portugal, the nationalisation of Maputos real estate transformed the racial and social landscape of the city, but liberalisation of the economy in the 1990s and the increasing commoditisation of property linked social and economic status more strongly to the structure of urban space. Although the use of old colonial spatial categories, such as 'cidade de cani‡o' and 'cidade de cimento', has been fading, the terms used today by residents to describe Maputos urban space still underscore spatial, social, and economic differences. Based on fieldwork carried out in three Maputo neighbourhoods that are undergoing significant change, this article looks at peoples activities and movements across the city and the resulting imbrication and interaction between different neighbourhoods. It suggests that Maputo, an African postcolonial city, is experiencing changes that allow residents to establish new relationships with the city, encouraging novel expressions of cityness and new conceptions of the urban to emerge. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Jc;C1 M3 - 410698318 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1189273 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1944 T1 - Taming my elephant A1 - Amulungu,Tshiwa Trudie Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Met gloss KW - autobiographies (form) KW - diplomats KW - Namibia RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 306 CY - Windhoek PB - UNAM Press U2 - w22 SN - 99916-4218-8 AV - AFRIKA 51765 Y2 - 2017/01/06/ M3 - 40921325X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1939 T1 - The changing religious composition of Nigeria: causes and implications of demographic divergence A1 - Stonawski,Marcin A1 - Potancokov ,Michaela A1 - Cantele,Matthew A1 - Skirbekk,Vegard Y1 - 2016/// KW - demographic change KW - fertility KW - Nigeria KW - religion RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 361 EP - 387 JA - The Journal of Modern African Studies: (2016), vol.54, no.3, p.361-387 : graf., krt, tab. VL - 54 IS - 3 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - At nearly 170 million inhabitants, Nigeria is Africa's most populous country by twofold and fertility levels remain higher than most other sub-Saharan African nations. Throughout the last several decades, the fertility gap between Christians and Muslims has widened with significant political implications for a nascent democracy. Where the Demographic Health Survey (DHS) survey of 1990 revealed a non-significant difference of 0.3 children, this figure had increased to 2.3 children by 2013. As the total fertility rate (TFR) of Christians decreased significantly from 6.1 to 4.5 children per woman between 1990 and 2013, the TFR of Muslims increased from 6.4 to 6.8 children per woman. The timing of this divergence coincides with the formal institutionalization of Sharia law in 1999. We examine the role of religion on education, contraception and family behaviour. Finally, we touch upon the implications for population growth and the religious composition of Nigeria in the coming decades. App., bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Fn;C7 M3 - 410499250 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X16000409 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1934 T1 - The politics of displacement-related land conflict in Yei River County, South Sudan A1 - Justin,Peter Hakim A1 - Van Leeuwen,Mathijs Y1 - 2016/// KW - displaced persons KW - ethnicity KW - land conflicts KW - return migration KW - South Sudan RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 419 EP - 442 JA - The Journal of Modern African Studies: (2016), vol.54, no.3, p.419-442. VL - 54 IS - 3 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Drawing on empirical evidence from Yei River County in South Sudan, this paper argues that, rather than a temporary phenomenon, displacement may lead to a drastic reorganisation of land occupation and governance. Such reorganisation may become strongly connected to broader political contention. In the case of Yei, existing legal frameworks and institutions are inadequate to deal with land conflicts resulting from massive displacement and return. Crucially, historical grievances result in the displaced no longer being perceived as powerless victims, but as agents of a Dinka agenda to (re)occupy territories in Equatoria, and as perpetrators in land conflict. Such politics of land-control and identity may turn land disputes between displaced people and returnees into a major source of instability. At the same time, those displaced people who are not well-connected politically may lose their land rights. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Di;D2 M3 - 410499307 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X16000239 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1958 T1 - The production of urban peripheries for and by low-income populations at the turn of the millennium : Maputo, Luanda and Johannesburg A1 - Melo,Vanessa de Pacheco Y1 - 2016/// KW - Angola KW - housing policy KW - Mozambique KW - South Africa KW - urban development KW - urban planning RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 619 EP - 641 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.619-641 : foto's. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - The dynamics of rapid urbanisation and urban trends in the present neoliberal context, which arise from the production of space in the capitalist mode of production, are evident in the peripheries recently produced for and by low-income populations. This article examines these peripheries in representative southern African cities, with Maputo as the main case study, analysed in relation to Luanda and Johannesburg. Basing my argument on the overarching theory of the production of space, I seek to understand how the interventions undertaken by the state and low-income people, and the interrelationship between these two main agents and the urban morphology, vary according to the historical, political and socio-economic specificities of each country. I argue that in Maputo, more than in the other two cities, these specificities, expressed in the morphology of these peripheral areas, benefit some crucial aspects of the living and housing conditions of Maputo's low-income population, which is the city's most vulnerable social group. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Ia;J1 M3 - 40536234X L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1196955 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1945 T1 - The raging storm : a reporter's inside account of the Northern Uganda War, 1986-2005 A1 - Lamwaka,Caroline A1 - Atkinson,Ronald R. Y1 - 2016/// N1 - Met index, noten KW - 1980-1989 KW - 1990-1999 KW - 2000-2009 KW - Acholi KW - journalists KW - national liberation movements KW - Uganda RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XXVII, 463 CY - Kampala PB - Fountain Publishers U2 - w22 SN - 9970-25221-6 AV - AFRIKA 51766 Y2 - 2017/02/06/ M3 - 40921308X ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1953 T1 - The relationship between trade in southern Mozambique and state formation : reassessing Hedges on cattle, ivory and brass A1 - Chewins,Linell Y1 - 2016/// KW - cattle KW - ivory KW - Mozambique KW - political history KW - Southern Africa KW - State formation KW - trade RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 725 EP - 741 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.725-741 : tab. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - For the past 37 years, David Hedges' cattle trade theory has dominated the historical analysis of state formation in southern Africa during the 19th century. This theory centres on a cattle trade that came to replace the ivory trade from the late 18th century onwards, and was based on the demand for fresh meat by whalers. In the view of Hedges, the increased cattle trade placed considerable pressure on societies to replenish herds, given the socially and politically important role that cattle played in southern African societies. And since this change coincided with a severe and prolonged drought, it necessitated the restocking of cattle herds through the systematised military raiding of cattle, which, in turn, required a centralised government. In reviewing the evidence for shifts in the patterns of trade at this time, during which whalers called at Delagoa Bay to hunt, discrepancies in Hedges' analysis came to light.The Portuguese ivory trade at Delagoa Bay started in 1545, when a sporadic trade based on the monsoon seasons laid the foundation for the export of ivory that would boom in the latter half of the 18th century. This trade has been a key element in the dominant explanations offered for accelerated processes of political centralisation in northern Kwazulu-Natal, which culminated in the rise of the Zulu kingdom. David Hedges developed the most influential and enduring of these arguments in his doctoral dissertation in 1978. He argued that it was a sharp contraction of the ivory trade in the last two decades of the 19th century that was a major cause of conflict and state formation. This article reviews the evidence and arguments presented by Hedges and suggests that while his work has provided an important contribution to the debate, elements of his argument need substantial revision. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Jc;L2 M3 - 405362390 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1200869 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1959 T1 - Urbanisation and peri-urbanisation in Luanda : a geopolitical and socio-spatial perspective from the late colonial period to the present A1 - Leiria Viegas,S¡lvia Y1 - 2016/// KW - Angola KW - urban development KW - urban planning RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 595 EP - 618 JA - Journal of Southern African Studies: (2016), vol.42, no.4, p.595-618 : ill., foto's, tab. VL - 42 IS - 4 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Luanda has experienced rapid urban expansion, especially since the mid 20th century, due to growing migration from the countryside and intensive demographic growth. The city has been transformed by actions undertaken by the state and/or the private sector with government incentives, and by the people in their everyday lives. This forging of the city is characterised by significant territorial fragmentation and an enormous level of social exclusion, affecting particularly the most deprived social groups. The purpose of this article is, first, to systematise the geopolitical and socio-spatial changes taking place in the Angolan capital according to three major periods - late colonial (1948-1975), postcolonial amid civil war (1975-2002) and postcolonial at peace (2002 to the present) - and, second, to formulate theoretical considerations based on the work of scholars such as Henri Lefebvre, Manuel Castells, Michel Foucault and David Harvey, while taking into account dominant practices inspired by the 'right to the city' concept. Considering the ineffectiveness of most state-led 'top-down' interventions in reducing inequality and socio-spatial exclusion, and in the interest of pursuing new and unexplored 'bottom-up' methodologies, I will argue that, by means of the broader democratisation of governmental decision-making, and with the active participation of the population in drawing up the urban and housing strategies of the Angolan state, it may be possible to formulate alternative policies that can reduce some of the socio-spatial imbalances in Luanda, and consequently improve the quality of urban life. Doing so may create the conditions required to involve most of the population in the construction of full citizenship. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Gb;J1 M3 - 405362331 L3 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2016.1192893 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1936 T1 - We are not farmers: dilemmas and prospects of residential suburban cultivators in contemporary Dar es Salaam, Tanzania A1 - Owens,Geoffrey Ross Y1 - 2016/// KW - class formation KW - farmers KW - Tanzania KW - urban agriculture KW - urban sociology RP - NOT IN FILE SP - 443 EP - 467 JA - The Journal of Modern African Studies: (2016), vol.54, no.3, p.443-467. VL - 54 IS - 3 U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - Today, a majority of citizens of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, participate in suburban and exurban growth and development much like urbanites throughout the world. Unlike the garden suburbs of North America or Europe, Dar es Salaam's suburban residents often engage in multiple income-generating activities, the most common and conspicuous of which are cultivation and animal husbandry. The presence of urban farming has suggested that Dar es Salaam's residents represent peasants incrementally transitioning to urban life. This article however, contends that everything from the varieties of cultivation, access to land and water, to the definition of what it means to be a farmer is shaped by decentralised private interests controlling access to land and resources in suburban neighbourhoods. The varieties of cultivation and animal husbandry instead reflect socioeconomic class distinctions emerging from a new suburban political economy, enabling a clearer perspective on the prospects of cultivators as these suburban districts transform. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] AV - Elektronisch artikel Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - He;C5 M3 - 410499285 L3 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X16000392 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1965 T1 - Globale Krisen - Lokale Konflikte? : Soziale Bewegungen in Afrika A1 - Engels,Bettina A1 - Mller,Melanie A1 - ™hlschl„ger,Rainer Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - Africa KW - Benin KW - Burkina Faso KW - civil society KW - financing KW - Ghana KW - globalization KW - international relations KW - Kenya KW - land acquisition KW - national liberation movements KW - political conditions KW - protest KW - Senegal KW - South Africa KW - State-society relationship KW - women's organizations RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 165 CY - Baden-Baden PB - Nomos U2 - w22 T3 - Bayreuther Studien zu Politik und Gesellschaft in Afrika ; 1 N2 - Soziale Bewegungen in Afrika sind in vielfacher Weise von Globalisierungsprozessen betroffen und in sie eingebunden. Entscheidungen, die auf globaler Ebene getroffen werden, haben unmittelbare Effekte in diesen L„ndern und betreffen die jeweilige Zivilgesellschaft in hohem Maá. Lokale und pan-afrikanische Netzwerke mobilisieren sich im Zusammenhang mit globalen Ver„nderungen. Vernetzung findet zwischen Nord und Sd ebenso statt wie zwischen AktivistInnen aus unterschiedlichen L„ndern und Regionen des globalen Sdens, verst„rkt auch ber regionale und Sprachgrenzen hinweg. Welche Bedeutung hat die Globalisierung fr soziale Bewegungen in Afrika? Wie sind diese Bewegungen und zivilgesellschaftliche Organisationen in globale Foren wie internationale Konferenzen und Weltsozialforen eingebunden? Welche Rolle nehmen sie in transnationalen zivilgesellschaftlichen Netzwerken ein? Welche Rolle spielt die Finanzierung durch externe Partner fr die Organisationen? Inhalt: Theorien im Norden, Bewegungen im Sden? Soziale Bewegungen in Afrika (Bettina Engels, Melanie Mller); Soziale Bewegungen kontextsensibel analysieren: das Konzept der Habitus-Struktur-Reflexivitat (Lars Schmitt); Warum national? Ein postkolonialer Rckblick auf nationale Befreiungsbewegungen (Reinhart K”áler); Antikolonialer Widerstand als transnationale soziale Praxis (Daniel Kaiser); Wes Brot ich ess, des Lied ich sing? Gewerkschaften in Ghana und Benin und die F”rderung der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (Frauke Banse); Das schwierige Verh„ltnis von sozialen Bewegungen und Gewerkschaften in Sdafrika (Melanie Mller); 'Money makes the world go round': Gebereinflsse auf Frauenorganisationen in Kenia (Antje Daniel); Nicht alles, was gl„nzt, ist Gold: Konflikte um die Ausweitung des industriellen Bergbaus in Burkina Faso (Bettina Engels); Wer nutzt Land "produktiv"? Framing in Protesten gegen land grabbing im Senegal (Louisa Prause) SN - 3-8487-2250-X AV - AFRIKA 51169 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Ba;D2 M3 - 407935231 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1964 T1 - L'‚criture fragmentaire dans les productions africaines contemporaines A1 - B‚d‚,Damien A1 - Coulibaly,Moussa Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - Africa KW - literary criticism KW - literature RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 226 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Espaces litt‚raires N2 - Le pr‚sent ouvrage aborde, … la suite de tant d'autres volumes aussi bien th‚oriques que pratiques, la question de la fragmentation dans les cr‚ations litt‚raires. Il s'agit, par le biais de diff‚rentes contributions, d'appr‚hender la pratique fragmentaire chez les auteurs africains contemporains. Si son usage chez ceux-ci d‚voile un tant soit peu la d‚sint‚gration des genres litt‚raires, elle est, aprŠs tout, une exigence formellement admise. De la sorte, les auteurs africains ne sont plus des fragmentaires malgr‚ eux-mˆmes, mais des fragmentaires confirm‚s dans leurs prises de plume. Dans cette posture, elles corroborent un choix d‚lib‚r‚, conscient d'une pratique scripturale en plein essor dans le vaste champ de production litt‚raire africaine. Dans cet ouvrage collectif, on d‚couvrira que chaque contribution est une illustration de ce que, aujourd'hui, la pratique fragmentaire est un fait contemporain qui est partie prenante du quotidien de l'homme. Dans cette optique, elle est pr‚sent‚e dans ce livre comme une pratique questionnant le monde en permettant un dialogue entre les genres ; ce qui engendre du coup une parole plurielle. · vrai dire, elle se veut une pratique dans laquelle tout semble possible puisque tous les auteurs ‚tudi‚s ont proc‚d‚ par d‚construction/reconstruction de leurs textes faisant de la pratique fragmentaire, d'abord un jeu, ensuite une quˆte permanente d'une esth‚tique scripturale d‚sormais ‚rig‚e en ‚thique. Contributions: L'‚criture fragmentaire : jeux et enjeux dans l'Afrique en morceaux de Williams Sassine / Damien B‚d‚ -- LumiŠres de Pointe-Noire d'Alain Mabanckou du fragmentaire … l'identit‚-rhizome / ArsŠne Bl‚ Kain -- Le jeu du fragmentaire chez V‚ronique Tadjo, un exercice de cr‚ation romanesque / Moussa Coulibaly -- criture autofictionnelle, fragmentation et je(ux) m‚moriels : situations et enjeux dans Mes hommes … moi de Ken Bugul / Damo Junior Vianney Koffi -- Formes et sens de l'‚criture fragmentaire dans le roman africain / Bidy Cyprien Bodo -- La fragmentation des personnages f‚minins et l'exploration de la libert‚ dans le roman gabonais du XXIe siŠcle. Le cas de Cueillez-moi jolis Messieurs de Bessora / Pamela Nzang Obame Mba -- Nedjma de Kateb Yacine : une ‚criture fragmentaire / Wafae Karzazi -- L'‚criture du chaos dans le roman de Tierno Mon‚nembo / Fran‡ois Koffi Konan -- Esth‚tique de la fragmentation dans Bleu- Blanc- Rouge d'Alain Mabanckou / L‚vys Yao Yao -- Le fragmentaire comme ultime exigence de la fiction narrative africaine contemporaine : Le Cavalier et son ombre de Boubacar Boris Diop / Dacharly Mapangou -- Jeu de production litt‚raire et effet de sens : les nouvelles ‚critures africaines, une po‚tique du fragmentaire / Ignace Hirigo Tai SN - 2-343-06166-1 pbk AV - AFRIKA 51560 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Ba;K2 M3 - 408120770 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1962 T1 - legbe, Prince of Benin and the Orhionmwon territories : a history of Benin A1 - Aisien,Ekhaguosa Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: XIX-XX. - Met index KW - Benin polity KW - colonial period KW - Edo KW - history KW - Nigeria KW - precolonial period KW - traditional rulers RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XX, 265 CY - Benin City PB - Aisien Publishers U2 - w22 SN - 978-52935-1-3 AV - AFRIKA 51656 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 409266647 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1963 T1 - Les familles africaines et le mythe de l'Occident : destins migratoires singuliers A1 - Gatugu,Joseph A1 - Man‡o,Altay A. Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten Bevat: Pr‚face. Parent‚s et apparentements des "Africains" en immigration et autres regards sur les espaces d'origine et d'installation / Altay Man‡o -- L'impens‚ des discours sur le v‚cu migratoire des Africains en Occident / Joseph Gatugu -- De la colonisation politique … la colonisation symbolique : d'une servitude … l'autre. Comprendre la migration matrimoniale de la femme mauricienne vers l'Europe et la Suisse / Bhama Peerun Steiger -- Entre la r‚unification et la recomposition : cheminements familiaux pour les immigrants africains subsahariens au Canada / Paulin Mulatris, Georges-Malanga Liboy -- Les nouveaux c‚libataires g‚ographiques africains / Joseph Gatugu -- Le divorce et ses effets au sein de la diaspora subsaharienne de Belgique / Jacques Mubalamata Kabongo -- Les jeunes issus de l'immigration subsaharienne en Belgique / Ural Man‡o, Mireille-Tsheusi Robert, Billy Kalonji -- T‚moignages sur le v‚cu migratoire des familles africaines en Angleterre / Marie-Louise Hatungimana, Christine K. Muanda -- Perspectives et recommandations / Joseph Gatugu. KW - Africans KW - Canada KW - diasporas KW - Europe KW - family KW - immigrants KW - migration KW - social conditions KW - Subsaharan Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 243 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Comp‚tences interculturelles SN - 2-343-05417-7 AV - AFRIKA 51425 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M1 - Ea;C6 M3 - 408168889 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1961 T1 - The state in Africa : a critical study in historiography and political philosophy A1 - Yandaki,A.I. Y1 - 2015/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 255-301. - Met index., noten KW - Africa KW - Hausa KW - historiography KW - Nigeria KW - Northern Nigeria KW - political history KW - State RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XII, 332 CY - [S.l. U2 - w22 SN - 978-52578-9-4 AV - AFRIKA 51660 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409267635 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1969 T1 - Crucible of the ages : essays in honour of Wole Soyinka at 80 A1 - Agyeman-Duah,Ivor A1 - Okekwe,Ogochukwu Promise Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Met index, noten KW - culture KW - festschrifts (form) KW - Nigeria KW - writers RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XXXV, 294 CY - Ibadan PB - Bookcraft U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available N2 - This collective volume celebrates the 80th birthday of Nigerian human rights activist, actor, writer, teacher, musician, film maker, poet, politician, hunter, wine connoisseur, art collector and shadow architect Wole Soyinka. It contains 30 essays organized into six sections: 1. Salutatory musings for the master's taste; 2. The canvass is universal: philosophy, literature and politics of redemption; 3. Harvest of past seasons: memoirs, conversations and palavers; 4. The museum, African art and music; 5. Poetry for the threshold; 6. Tradition and modernity of governance. Contributors include Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Nadine Gordimer, Sefi Atta, Toni Morrison, Ama Ata Aidoo, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Ali A Mazrui, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Derek Walcott, Abena Busia, Aderonke Adesola Adesanya & Toyin Falola, Atukwei Okai, Ogochukwu Promise, John Dramani Mahama, Thabo Mbeki and the king of Asante, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II. [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-84570-7-X hbk AV - AFRIKA 51175 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M1 - Fn;K2 M3 - 408082925 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1967 T1 - Don't die on Wednesday A1 - Afenfia,Michael Y1 - 2014/// KW - football KW - Nigeria KW - novels (form) RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 259 CY - Okota, Lagos PB - Origami U2 - w22 SN - 978-52947-4-9 AV - AFRIKA Lit.10669 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409268003 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1968 T1 - Images : prologue to Africa's development and economic renaissance A1 - Soyibo,Adedoyin Y1 - 2014/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 216-225. - Met bijl., index, noten KW - Africa KW - development cooperation KW - economic development KW - economic history KW - government policy RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XXI, 240 CY - Ibadan PB - University Press PLC U2 - w22 SN - 978-06-9809-4 AV - AFRIKA 51661 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409267872 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1966 T1 - Loi no. 1/20 du 3 juin 2014 portant r‚vision de la loi no. 1/22 du 18 septembre 2009 portant Code ‚lectoral Y1 - 2014/// KW - Burundi KW - election law KW - laws (form) RP - NOT IN FILE CY - [Bujumbara] PB - Cabinet du pr‚sident de la R‚publique du Burundi U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410718564 L3 - http://www.parliament.am/library/norelectoral%20law/burundi.pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1971 T1 - Conscience and history A1 - Odili,Peter Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Vermelding op omslag: Conscience and history : my story : (an autobiography) Met index., noten KW - autobiographies (form) KW - doctors KW - local government KW - Nigeria KW - politicians RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 511 CY - [Nigeria] PB - [Peter Otunuya Odili?] U2 - w22 SN - 978-93137-5-6 AV - AFRIKA 51658 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 409267244 ER - TY - JOUR ID - 1970 T1 - Customary law in Nigeria A1 - San,Epiqhany Azinge Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Met bibliogr., noten KW - customary law KW - law of inheritance KW - Nigeria KW - women KW - Yoruba RP - NOT IN FILE PB - Institute of African Studies U2 - w22 T3 - African notes, ISSN 0002-0087 ; vol. 37, no. 3 AV - AFRIKA article Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410625159 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1972 T1 - Minorities as competitive overlords A1 - Ego-Alowes,Jimanze Y1 - 2013/// N1 - Omslagtitel KW - economic conditions KW - essays (form) KW - minority groups KW - Nigeria KW - social classes RP - NOT IN FILE EP - VII, 144 CY - Lagos PB - Stone Press U2 - w22 SN - 978-93250-9-6 AV - AFRIKA 51655 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 40926654X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1973 T1 - The state of the nation : a collection of essays A1 - Umukoro,Matthew M. Y1 - 2012/// N1 - Met bijl., index, noten KW - articles (form) KW - newspapers KW - Nigeria KW - political conditions KW - social problems RP - NOT IN FILE EP - X, 196 CY - Ibadan [etc.] PB - Gold Press Limited U2 - w22 SN - 978-84282-1-5 pbk AV - AFRIKA 51653 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 409266167 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1979 T1 - Nigerian columnists and their art A1 - Idowu,Lanre Y1 - 2011//20/ N1 - Oorspr. uitg.: 2009 Met index KW - journalists KW - newspapers KW - Nigeria RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XX, 256 CY - Lagos PB - Diamond Publications U2 - w22 SN - 978-2938-64-5 AV - AFRIKA 51689 Y2 - 2017/02/06/ M3 - 409308463 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1978 T1 - Olumo : the mystique of an alluring symbol : the memoirs of the Honourable Justice Olujide Somolu, Chief Justice of the Western State 1967-1971 A1 - Somolu,Femi A1 - Somolu,Kayode A1 - Somolu,Seke Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met bijl., index KW - autobiographies (form) KW - judges KW - Nigeria RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XXIII, 262 CY - Lagos PB - Florence and Lambard U2 - w22 SN - 978-91455-3-5 AV - AFRIKA 51642 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409319562 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1976 T1 - Thembi et Jetje : tisseuses de l'arc en ciel A1 - Edimo,Christophe N'galle A1 - Augustyn,Bozena Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Bevat: 1: Mandela / dessin de Bozena Augustyn -- 2. Nicole / dessin de Samuel Daina -- 3. Jetje et Thembi / dessin de Armella Leung -- 4. MaŒtre Gombi / dessin de Adjim Danngar -- 5. Adolescence / dessin de Batoule Alimam -- 6. Clarence / dessin de Didier Viod‚ -- 7. Zimbabwe / dessin de Brahim Rais -- 8. Stars du football / dessin de Simon Mbumbo -- 9. Renaissances / dessin de Brice Reignier -- 10. Projets de vie / dessin de Didier Viod‚ KW - comic strips (form) KW - race relations KW - racism KW - South Africa RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 128 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Harmattan BD SN - 2-296-54690-0 AV - AFRIKA Lit.10681 Y2 - 2017/01/06/ M3 - 41072551X ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1980 T1 - Time to reclaim Nigeria : essays 2001-2011 A1 - Onumah,Chido Y1 - 2011/// N1 - Met bijl., index, noten KW - essays (form) KW - journalists KW - newspapers KW - Nigeria KW - political conditions RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XXXII, 280 CY - Abuja PB - African Centre for Media & Information Literacy U2 - w22 SN - 978-91924-0-1 AV - AFRIKA 51643 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409236527 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1977 T1 - We are Nigerians: civics and history for primary schools : teacher's guide three We are Nigerians : civics and history for primary schools A1 - Adeola,Aminat A1 - Dosekun,Simidile Y1 - 2011/// KW - history education KW - Nigeria KW - primary education KW - social studies RP - NOT IN FILE CY - Lagos PB - Farafina U1 - Free access. U2 - w22 SN - 978-978-50187-6-9 AV - Elektronisch document Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410623687 L3 - http://www.kachifo.com/Uploads/Teacher%27s%20Guide%20(Book%203).pdf ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1984 T1 - Somalia: economic, political and social issues A1 - Hoffmann,Elias P. Y1 - 2010/// N1 - Met bibliogr., index, noten KW - international relations KW - Northeast Africa KW - piracy KW - political conditions KW - political violence KW - Somalia KW - terrorism KW - United States RP - NOT IN FILE EP - IX, 232 CY - New York, NY PB - Nova Science Publishers U2 - w22 U3 - Abstract available T3 - Countries, regional studies, trading blocks, unions, world organizations N2 - Somalia has long been plagued by conflict, humanitarian concerns, and economic stagnation. Between 2007 and 2009 the country saw a sharp increase of piracy off its shores. Somalia occupies a unique space, both geographically and strategically, as the country sits at the crossroads of sub-Saharan Africa and the Near East. The overall security of the region is affected by Somalia's continued lack of internal stability. U.S. interests in Somalia and in the Horn of Africa region are to promote and support regional stability and representative government, to eliminate any platform for al-Qaida or other terrorist operations and to work with governments in the region to transform the countries investing in people with good governance and promoting economic growth. This book explores and examines Somalia's economic, political, and social issues. Contributions: 1. The migration history, demography, and socio-economic position of the Somali community in Britain (Peter J. Aspinall and Lavinia Mitton); 2. Somalia's insecurity and the normalisation of violence ((Stephen Vertigans); 3. Somalia: understanding the feasible institutions (Christopher J. Coyne and Peter T. Leeson); 4. Testimony by Assistant Secretary for African Affairs, Jendayi E. Frazer, before the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee Hearing "Exploring a comprehensive stabilization, reconstruction and counter-terrorism strategy for Somalia" (Jendayi E. Frazer); 5. Testimony of Michael E. Hess, Assistant Administrator, Bureau for Democracy, Conflict, and Humanitarian Assistance, before the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on African Affairs "Exploring a comprehensive stabilization, reconstruction and counter-terrorism strategy for Somalia" (Michael E. Hess); 6. Testimony by Dr. Ken Menkhaus, Professor, Political Science, Davidson College, before the Subcommittee on African Affairs "Exploring a comprehensive stabilization, reconstruction and counter-terrorism strategy for Somalia" (Ken Menkhaus); 7. Testimony by J. Stephen Morrison, Director, Africa Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies, before the Subcommittee on African Affairs "Exploring a comprehensive stabilization, reconstruction and counter-terrorism strategy for Somalia" (J. Stephen Morrison); 8. Testimony by David H. Shinn, Adjunct Professor, Elliot School of International Affairs, George Washington University, former U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia and State Department coordinator for Somalia, before the Subcommittee on African Affairs "Exploring a comprehensive stabilization, reconstruction and counter-terrorism strategy for Somalia" (David H. Shinn); 9. Testimony by ambassador Stephen D. Mull, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Confronting Piracy off the Coast of Somalia (Stephen D. Mull); 10. Piracy off the Horn of Africa (Lauren Ploch, Christopher M. Blanchard, Ronald O'Rourke, R. Chuck Mason, and Rawle O. King); 11. Somalia: several challenges lLimit U.S. and international stabilization, humanitarian, and development efforts (Government Accountability Office); 12. Somalia: current conditions and prospects for a lasting peace (Ted Dagne); 13. Commentary: re-establishing the Somali State: for the benefit of the nation or other nations? (Stephen Vertigans). [ASC Leiden abstract] SN - 978-1-616-68222-4 AV - AFRIKA 51215 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 333006909 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1983 T1 - Weiáe Blicke - schwarze K”rper : Afrikaner im Spiegel westlicher Alltagskultur Bilder aus der Sammlung Peter Weiss A1 - Zeller,Joachim A1 - Weiss,Peter Y1 - 2010/// N1 - Bibliogr.: p. 247-250 KW - Africa KW - Africans KW - Europe KW - images KW - postcards KW - stereotypes RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 250 CY - Erfurt PB - Sutton U2 - w22 N2 - Millionenfach kursierten Anfang des 20. Jh. Bildpostkarten und pr„gten die Vorstellung vom <>. Sie zeigen den Afrikaner, wie ihn die Weissen sahen oder sehen wollten, als Exoten, Wilden, kolonialen Untertan oder Witzfigur. Es gibt viele Argumente, Bilder wie diese in den Archiven zu belassen. Aber: Bilder lassen sich nicht „ndern, wohl aber deren Rezeption. Differenziert bricht dieses Buch rassistische Wahrnehmungsmuster auf. (Quelle: www.globaleducation.ch) SN - 3-86680-412-1 AV - AFRIKA 51906 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 410526347 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1989 T1 - La formation des chefs d'‚tablissements scolaires en Guin‚e A1 - Diallo,Amadou Tidjane Y1 - 2006/// N1 - Met noten, samenvattingen in Frans en Engels KW - distance education KW - Guinea KW - leadership KW - office workers KW - schools RP - NOT IN FILE EP - 148 CY - Paris PB - L'Harmattan U2 - w22 T3 - Cahiers africains de recherche en ‚ducation ; no 6 N2 - Ce livre collectif est consacr‚ … la professionalisation des personnels administratifs des services ‚ducatifs guin‚ens. Contributions de Mamadou Dian Gongor‚ Diallo, Moustapha Diallo, Michele Kone et Dj‚nabou Balde SN - 2-296-01473-9 AV - AFRIKA 51561 Y2 - 2017/05/29/ M3 - 407986537 ER - TY - BOOK ID - 1988 T1 - Obasanjo's presidency and King David's rule : (overwhelming similarities) A1 - Nwokeforo,Ukeje Jonah Y1 - 2006/// N1 - Vermelding op omslag: Agenda for national rebirth and development Bibliogr.: p. 396-422. - Met index KW - Bible KW - heads of State KW - Nigeria KW - political history RP - NOT IN FILE EP - XX, 431 CY - Ibadan PB - Wisdom Publishers Limited U2 - w22 SN - 978-2823-29-5 AV - AFRIKA 51659 Y2 - 2017/05/30/ M3 - 409267430 ER -