Extractions: Not cataloged, December 2003 How the failure of key individuals, prominent NGO's, and governments to act allowed a catastrophe to fester a catastrophe that undoubtedly could have been avoided. Since it appeared 20 years ago, AIDS has left a trail of destruction behind it. This film answers the question "Why did the world wait so long to react?" and dissects the key moments in the global response to the epidemic.... (English subtitles provided for narration in French.) About the United Nations see Africa Recovery Al abwab al moghlaka see The Closed Doors 2- Adieu Bonaparte
Business & Human Rights: Indigenous Peoples 1997-2001 The Ogiek (sometimes referred to as dorobo ) are a Bulletin, in WOZA Eco SouthAfrica, Apr. Special Rapporteur on Rights of indigenous People (United Nations http://209.238.219.111/Indigenous-1997-2001.htm
Extractions: back to home Business and Human Rights: a resource website Indigenous peoples: 1997-2001 See also other materials on "Indigenous peoples" Brazil Sees Promise in Jungle Plants, but Tribes See Peril: The Brazilian government, increasingly fearful of what it regards as "biopiracy" by foreign pharmaceutical companies, universities and laboratories, is moving to impose stricter controls on medicinal plants in the Amazon region. (Larry Rohter, New York Times , 23 Dec. 2001) Brazil's Indians take path toward medicinal patents:...In their crusade, Brazilian officials and Indian representatives this week will take a declaration from a convention of Indian spiritual leaders and witch doctors to the United Nations' World Intellectual Property Organization meeting in Geneva. (Andrei Khalip, Reuters , 12 Dec. 2001) Brazil Shuts Down Illegal Mahogany Trade: In a major victory for environmentalists, the Brazilian government Wednesday announced the cancellation of all but two mahogany logging operations in the Amazon. (Jim Lobe, OneWorld US , 6 Dec. 2001)
References In Contemporary nomadic and pastoral peoples africa and Latin America, ed A preliminary report on the ethnobotany of the Suiei dorobo in northern Kenya http://www.ifad.org/gender/thematic/livestock/live_ref.htm
Extractions: document.write(document.title) Abu, K. 1990. Socio-economic study of livestock keeping in the northern region. Draft report for ZOPP project planning workshop, Khartum. GTZ, Eschborn, Germany Abu Bodie, G.J. 1979. The role of Rendille women. IPAL Technical Report F-2, UNESCO/MAB. Adan, A.H. 1988. Adra, N. 1983. Ahmed, A.G.M. 1972. Essays in Sudan Ethnology, Ahmed, A.G.M. 1976. Some aspects of pastoral nomadism in the Sudan. Economic and Social Research Council, Khartoum. Al-Hassny, A. 1983. Allan, W. 1965. The African husbandman. Asad, T. 1970. The Kababish Arabs: Power, authority and consent in a nomadic tribe. New York: Praeger Publ. Attfield, H.H.D. 1990. Raising chickens and ducks. London: VITA. Attia, H. 1983. Seminaire sur le role des femmes dans la production vivriere (Summary). Expert consultation on women in food production, FAO, Rome.
Extractions: Lesotho Liberia Madagascar Malawi ... African cinema videography (via U. Pennsylvania) Films and Documents About Women in Africa (via UCB African American Studies Dept.) African Cinema and African Cinematic Representation: A Short Bibliography/Videography of Materials in the UC Berkeley Libraries Africa. 8 part series by Basil Davidson. The story is unfolded on location all over Africa, showing life as it is today, plus archive film and dramatized reconstructions. Two programs per cassette, each an hour long. 1984. Different But Equal (Part 1). Describes how some of the world's greatest early civilizations had their origins in the heart of black Africa and discusses some of their artistic, technical and scientific achievements. Video/C MM452 Mastering a Continent (Part 2). Looks at two important developments in early African society, the growth of cattle keeping and agriculture. Focuses on the activities of three communities, the Pokot in Northern Kenya, Sukor in Nigeria and the Dogon of Mali. Video/C MM452 Caravans of Gold (Part 3).
SOAS: SOAS: Centre Of African Studies: Members: Anthropology indigenous medicine and medical anthropology; therapy and illness among the Age organisation in East africa; Maaspeaking peoples (Samburu, Maasai, http://www.soas.ac.uk/centres/centreinfo.cfm?navid=693
Cultural Survival The dorobo and Ogiek indigenous peoples have been ordered to leave their land byMarch 31. Sources and Further Reading The East African Standard 1/19/2004. http://209.200.101.189/publications/win/win-article.cfm?id=2195
The Xhosa Of South Africa from Central africa into the southern africa areas. The indigenous people they meton their migrations were the Khoisan (Bushmen and Hottentot) peoples. http://edncd.schoolnet.org.za/edn-jan03/Finding Information/CONTENT/THE XHOSA OF
FTR/UN 2001 E/CN.4/Sub.2/2001/17 Prevention of discrimination and protection of indigenous peoples An indigenousrepresentative of South africa discussed the formation of a new http://www.hri.ca/fortherecord2001/documentation/commission/e-cn4-sub2-2001-17.h
Extractions: F.Adoption of the report (par.16) pg.6 II. REVIEW OF DEVELOPMENTS PERTAINING TO THE PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES:INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND THEIR RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT, INCLUDING THEIR RIGHT TO PARTICIPATE IN DEVELOPMENT AFFECTING THEM (par.17 78) pg.7 III. REVIEW OF RECENT DEVELOPMENTS PERTAINING TO THE PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: GENERAL STATEMENTS, INCLUDING LAND ISSUES, EDUCATION AND HEALTH (par.79 - 130) pg.18 IV. STANDARDSETTING ACTIVITIES, INCLUDING A REVIEW OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES RELATIONSHIP WITH NATURAL RESOURCE, ENERGY AND MINING COMPANIES (par.131 140) pg.26
= Environmental Action = The ideology also proposes the subordination of nonindigenous peoples within Pages 149-168 in Conservation in africa people, policies and practice. http://www.environmentalaction.net/aa_kenya_policy.htm
Extractions: TRADEOFF OR LOST MUTUALISM? by Ted Cheeseman INTRODUCTION This paper explores two large classes of policy failure which have caused deviation from Pareto optimality between principal stakeholders in the southern Kenyan Maasailands. First, an inappropriate settlement and privatization scheme attempted to give Maasai title to land historically theirs while ushering them into the Kenyan market economy, but instead caused fragmentation of their rangeland ecology and culture. Second, wildlife conservation in Amboseli National Park and the Masai Mara Game Reserve is dangerously unsustainable in large part through shortsighted, inadequate and poorly implemented policy. The situation has created conflict between conservation interests and the Maasai, and funnels the economic benefits of tourism away from those who bear the costs of lost land rights. STAKEHOLDERS Five principal groups exert force over natural resource control in the southern Kenyan Maasailands: Maasai: The Maasai have occupied southern Kenya and the Rift Valley for at least a millennium, maintaining a semi-nomadic pastoral lifestyle closer to their traditional culture than any other southern Kenyan tribe. Their principal demand is for land rights, with increasing interest in modern services to improve standards of living and market power.
Extractions: Welcome to www.books.buying-cheaper-in-uk.com. Here you will find an updated directory of bestselling hardware and software in different categories. We will also show you where you can buy these products cheap and save money finding best deals and special offers offered by leading online retailers and internet shops. For every title and product we will present a link to a website where you can get more information, images, descriptions, customer review and ratings and also an online price comparison which shows special offers and hot deals of different shops and competitors. You also can find used and new offers on this website. Buying used is a good chance to save a lot of money. In general a good start entry for buying online is Amazon.co.uk world's leading online retailer.
Yaaku - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia The Maasai look down upon huntergatherer peoples, calling them dorobo ( the ones Sommer, Gabriele (1992) A survey on language death in africa , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaaku_language
Extractions: (Redirected from Yaaku language The Yaaku (often Mukogodo-Maasai ) are a people living in the Mukogodo forest west of Mount Kenya , a division of the Laikipia District of Rift Valley Province Kenya . Former hunter-gatherers and bee-keepers , the Yaaku have assimilated to the pastoralist culture of the Maasai in the first half of the twentieth century, although there is still some occasional bee-keeping going on. The reason for this transition is mostly one of social prestige . The Maasai look down upon hunter-gatherer peoples, calling them Dorobo ('the ones without cattle'), and many Yaaku consider the Maasai culture to be superior. As a result of the assimilation the Yaaku almost completely gave up their Cushitic language Yaaku for the Eastern Nilotic Maasai language between 1925 and 1936. The Maasai variant they speak nowadays is called Mukogodo-Maasai. Old Yaaku words are still found in some parts of the bee-keeping vocabulary, for example: A revivalist movement has been rising among the Yaaku in recent years, aiming to strenghten the Yaaku identity. In early 2005, Maarten Mous, Hans Stoks and Matthijs Blonk visited
Cultural Survival The dorobo and Ogiek indigenous peoples have been ordered to leave their land byMarch 31. Source The East African Standard , January 19, 2004. http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/news/news/news_article.cfm?id=23543
FPcN Friends Of Peoples Close To Nature 4 (3 women and 1 men) people were arrested referred to as Cherangany or dorobo) willfind to raise fundamental issues affecting the indigenous community since http://fpcn.nologic.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=index&catid=&topic
The Wangara, An Old Soninke Diaspora In West Africa? Translate this page Dioula, Nénéya, Kamaya, Koumala, dorobo, Donzo-Ouattara Local people were recruitedas warriors, and establishments which rose from indigenous village towards http://etudesafricaines.revues.org/document.html?id=175
The Wangara, An Old Soninke Diaspora In West Africa? between foreigners and indigenous people, and animists and Moslems in Zaghari, dorobo is an Abron name derived from Drobo in western Ghana; http://etudesafricaines.revues.org/document175.html
Ogiek At Mylinksarea.com OGIEK PEOPLE The Ogiek, an indigenous people living mainly in Banjul Charter onHuman and peoples Rights National Development Processes These dorobo ie Ogiek http://www.mylinksarea.com/Ogiek.html
Revue De Sommaires - Détail Des Articles D Une Revue Anthropological studies of the indigenous peoples in Sakhalin in prewartime The politics of being hunter-gatherers among the Akie-dorobo of Tanzania ; http://www.msh-reseau.prd.fr/RevuesSom/detailrevue.jsp?Drevue=Senrix032;ethnolog
AnthroGlobe Bibliography: Foraging Peoples C-F From True dorobo to Mukogodo Maasai Contested Ethnicity in Kenya. Guardians ofthe Land indigenous peoples and the Health of the Earth. http://coombs.anu.edu.au/Biblio/biblio_forage2.html
Extractions: Robert Lawless robert.lawless@wichita.edu Last updated: 10 Apr 2005 This document is a part of a larger collection of the AnthroGlobe specialist bibliographies. It forms a subsection of the Asian Studies WWW VL and Pacific Studies WWW VL Do you have any corrections or addenda to this bibliography? If so, contact the Editor at the email address listed above. Your input will be gratefully received and acknowledged. Bibliography of Foraging Peoples A B C D ... P Q R S T U ... W X Y Z C Return to Top of this page Cachel, Susan. 1997. Dietary Shifts and the European Upper Palaeolithic Transition. Current Anthropology 38:579-603. Cadere, Helen. 1950. Fighting with Property: A Study of Kwakiutl Potlatching and Warfare, 1792-1930. American Ethnological Society Monograph 18. Seattle: University of Washington Press. Callaway, D., Joel G. Janetski, and O. Stewart. 1986. Ute. In Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 11: Great Basin. Warren L. D'Azevedo, ed. Pp. 336-367. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. Campana, Douglas V., ed. 1995. Before Farming: Hunter-Gatherer Society and Subsistence. MASCA [Museum Applied Science Center for Archaeology] Research Papers in Science and Archaeology, Vol. 12, Supplement. Philadelphia: University Museum, University of Pennsylvania.
Dorobo 1989 Aug 3 dorobo. Parkipuny, Moringe The Human Rights Situation of IndigenousPeoples in africa 2000 June 5 dorobo. africa News Online http://www.ntz.info/gen/n00143.html
Extractions: Paper IX: Early Maps of East Africa The first available map was published in a church-sponsored jounal 'The Church Missionary Intelligencer', No 1, Vol 1, (May ). It was this publication that announced to an incredulous world the existence of "Kilimanjaro, covered with eternal snow." This map does not attemp to portray any of the country lying to the west of Kilimanjaro, so Ngorongoro and the Serengeti do not appear. The whole area is designated "Wandorobo, a very poor people despised and maltreated by all tribes around".
Extractions: ASA News ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports From Nature Tourism to Ecotourism? The Case of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania Human Organization Spring 2005 by Charnley, Susan 6 Because the NCA is a prime tourist attraction in Tanzania, there are many competing interests in the tourism revenue it generates, and there is some amount of corruption associated with the distribution of tourism income. This undoubtedly limits the number of tourism dollars that trickle down to the Maasai. 8 Perhaps the NCAA could collect the tourist entrance fees, and the Maasai could collect a separate fee levied for walking safaris in Maasai territory (analogous to the vehicle fee paid for descending into the Crater). This money could be used, for example, to train Maasai guides and teach them English language skills. Additional fees for services (ie. guides, donkeys and their handlers, camping, meals) would be paid directly to the Maasai who provide those services.