IIM - Advanced Search Rural, Urban, indigenous peoples, Women, Theories and Critiques of Development Sri Lanka, SubSaharan africa, SUB-SAHARAN africa AND INDIAN OCEAN http://www.iim.qc.ca/cgi-bin/formEN2.cgi
Extractions: All Traditional and Endogenous Knowledge and Practices THEORETICAL ANALYSIS General Presentation Endogenous Cooperation Critique of Knowledge and Practices Environmental Destruction Destruction of Knowledge Resistance to Destruction Studies of Groups and Movements Integration of Tradition and Modernity Intellectual Property Rights Research Life Stories and Experiences Theories of Intercultural Approaches HEALTH AND MEDICAL CULTURES Concepts of Health Healing/Therapeutic Practices Drugs and Medications Pluralistic Practices - Health and Medical Cultures ARTISTIC CULTURES ECOLOGICAL CULTURES Ecosophy Biodiversity Water and Arid Regions Forests Marine Environment Soils Pluralistic Practices - Ecological cultures ECONOMIC CULTURES Agriculture Craftsmanship/Artisanship Trade/Barter Animal Husbandry Industry Fishing, Hunting and Gathering
IIM - Advanced Search HEALTH AND MEDICAL CULTURES, Human Development, indigenous peoples, Industry Sri Lanka, SubSaharan africa, SUB-SAHARAN africa AND INDIAN OCEAN http://www.iim.qc.ca/cgi-bin/formEN2A.cgi
Extractions: All Adult Education Agriculture ALTERNATIVE DEVELOPMENT Alternative Technologies ALTERNATIVES TO DEVELOPMENT Animal Husbandry Anthropological Vision ARTISTIC CULTURES Beliefs Biodiversity Communication and Information Community Development Concepts and Practices of Work Concepts of Community Concepts of Health Conflict Resolution Cosmological Vision Craftsmanship/Artisanship Crime and Delinquency CRISIS OF DEVELOPMENT AND MODERNITY Critique of Knowledge and Practices CRITIQUES OF DOMINANT KNOWLEDGE CULTURAL COLONIALISM OF DEVELOPMENT CULTURES AND DEVELOPMENT Currency/Money Defence and Security Practices Destruction of Knowledge Drugs and Medications Ecodevelopment ECOLOGICAL CULTURES ECONOMIC CULTURES Ecosophy EDUCATIONAL CULTURES Educational Structures Endogenous Cooperation Endogenous Development Entrepreneurship Environmental Destruction Ethnodevelopment ETHNOSCIENCE Family Festivals and Celebrations Fishing, Hunting and Gathering
EBALL EBALL = Electronic Bibliography for african Languages and Linguistics. In africa s indigenous peoples first peoples or marginalised minorities ?, http://goto.glocalnet.net/maho/eballsamples/sample_w310.html
Bibliography Morgan WTW (1972) East africa Its peoples and Resources. Body symbols andthe power of regeneration among the zaramo of Tanzania. http://herkules.oulu.fi/isbn9514264312/html/b979.html
Extractions: Professional and lay care in the Tanzanian village of Ilembula Prev Next Aamodt AM (1989) Ethnography and epistemology: Generating Nursing Knowledge. In: Morse JM (ed) Qualitative Nursing Research: A Contemporary Dialogue, 27â40. Aspen Publishers, Inc. Rockville, Maryland. Abdullah SN (1995) Towards an individualized clientâs care: implication for education. The transcultural approach. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 22: 715â720. Agar MH (1981) The professional stranger: An informal ethnography. Academic Press, New York. Anderson KB (1986) Introductory Course and African Traditional Religion. Evangel Publishing House, Nairobi. Anderson JM (1991) The phenomenological perspective. In: Morse JM (ed) Dialogue Qualitative Nursing Research. A Contemporary Dialogue, 25â37. Sage, London. Appleton JV (1995) Analysing qualitative interview data: addressing issues of validity and reliability. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 22: 993â997. Atkinson P (1990) The Ethnographic Imagination: Textual Constructions of Reality. Routledge, London. Baker C (1997) Cultural Relativism and Cultural Diversity: Implications for Nursing Practice. Advances in Nursing Science, 20(1): 3â11.
WMI Catalouge with slaves and melded with Spanish and indigenous elements to By the Nguni ismeant the peoples along the SE Nyakyusa, Gogo, Hehe, zaramo, Nyamwezi, Haya. http://heartheworld.org/ShoppingCart/Catalogue.asp?Action=Sort&View=Sorted&Sort=
WMI Catalouge By the Nguni is meant the peoples along the SE Nyakyusa, Gogo, Hehe, zaramo, Nyamwezi,Haya. the melding of three cultures African, indigenous and European http://heartheworld.org/ShoppingCart/Catalogue.asp?Action=Sort&View=Sorted&Sort=
GUS Epprecht, M. (1998) The Unsaying of indigenous Homosexualities in ZimbabweMapping a 81 Schapera, I. (1930) The Khoisan peoples of South africa, http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/sexology/GESUND/ARCHIV/GUS/AFRICA.HTM
Extractions: Growing Up Sexually Main Index Africa Tribal ToC Featured: !Ko !Kung !Xo (Ba)Katla/(Ba) kgatla Acholi Afar Afikpo Igbo ... Akan Ashanti Alur Ambo Amhara Amwimbe ... Atonga A zande Baamba Babunda Bachiga ... Bahemba Bahima/Bahuma Bahuana Bahuma Bajoro Baifa / Banen Baja Bajok / Badjok Bakongo Bakwa-Luntu ... Beti / Eton Bini Bobo Borroro Fulani Bovale ... Fali Fan / Pangwe Fang Fanti Kokomba ... Kaffir [sic] Kagoro Kaguru Kamba Kanuri ... Mambwe /Amambwe Mandari Mangbetu Manjak Maragoli ... Okiek / Ogiek Orri Pangwe / Fan Pedi Pokomo Poro Poro ... Thonga / Tsonga Thsi-Speakers Tiriki Tiv Tonga ... unspecified âEasy, easy, many women will weep if you errâ âNow unfold your scrotums and sleep in itâ âNyina owe, nyina owe, mayo wandi fuma ingawile nyina owe, nyina owe, nalete cisungu candi, nyina owe, nyina oweâ Main Index Africa (Generalia) CSSC ratings (Table) Index Tribal ToC (also featured to the left) Geographic ToC: Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso ... Cameroon Central Africa Congo . See also entries under Zaire C´te dâIvoire Djibouti Eritrea ... Nigeria , Rhodesia. See Zambia Zimbabwe Rwanda Senegal ... Uganda , Upper Volta. See
Paradoxia In Africa Among the Yorubaspeaking peoples, girls of better class were almost always Epprecht, M. (1998) The Unsaying of indigenous Homosexualities in http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/sexology/GESUND/ARCHIV/GUS/AFRICAOLD.HTM
Extractions: Growing Up Sexually World Reference Atlas (Oct., 2002) [to Atlas Index [to Main Index Janssen, D. F. (Oct., 2002). Growing Up Sexually . Volume I: World Reference Atlas. Interim report. Amsterdam, The Netherlands [Janssen, D. F. (Oct., 2002). Growing Up Sexually in Sub-Saharan Africa . Interim Excerpt. Amsterdam, The Netherlands] "Easy, easy, many women will weep if you err" "Now unfold your scrotums and sleep in it" "Nyina owe, nyina owe, mayo wandi fuma ingawile nyina owe, nyina owe, nalete cisungu candi, nyina owe, nyina owe" Geographic Index Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso ... Cameroon , Central Africa, Congo Côte d'Ivoire Djibouti Ethiopia ... Nigeria , Rhodesia. See Zambia, Zimbabwe Rwanda Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia ... Uganda , Upper Volta. See Burkina Faso Zaire Zambia Zimbabwe Ethnographic Index !Kung !Xo (!Ko), Auin, Ababoua, Abyssinia, Acholi Adamaoua Afar Afikpo Igbo , Ahaggaren. See Taureg Akan , Akela, Akwapim Alur Amhara Amwimbe ... Asaba Ibo , Ashanti. See Akan Atonga , Azande. See Zande , Azimba, Baamba Babunda Bachiga Bafia ... Baganda Bageshu, Bahemba Bahima Bahuana Bahuma Bajoro ... Bajok (Badjok), Bakene
Extractions: Thaddeus Sunseri IN 1874, WHEN the British officer Frederic Elton visited the southeast coast of Tanzania around the Rufiji delta, he noted how important the region's forests were to local commerce. Rufiji people obtained a wide variety of forest products, including wax, rubber, ivory, mangroves, and "immense quantities" of copal to trade with Indians and Arabs who settled on the coast. Elton traveled north and south of the delta and crisscrossed the land in between, and thus provided a view of the region ten years before German colonial rule began. Observing how local people guarded access to copal diggings and other forest tracts jealously, Elton wrote "the natives are only too ready to unite against the slightest encroachment on their monopoly." In one instance while camped along the Rufiji, Elton's party was surrounded by "about 800 men, more than half of whom were armed with guns, the rest carrying spears and bows." The leader made it clear that they were there to guard local trade against interlopers and "they heard there was to be a fight, and they would join the fight." Thirty years later the German colonial administration made the Rufiji delta and a one hundred mile stretch of coastal mangroves into a forest reserve, severely circumscribing African rights of access. With the advent of German rule, state-regulated forestry had arrived in Tanzania for the first time. In 1905, peoples of the Rufiji basin, wearing the same blue kaniki cloth around their hips as those whom Elton encountered, attacked representatives of German authority, including many involved in the declaration of forest reserves, in what is known as the Maji Maji rebellion.
Connie Popek, Bookseller At Antiqbook.com WITH MAPS) The Battle for North africa 119640 STRAYER WILLIAM C. - Native Americans The indigenous People of North The Medicine Man Among the zaramo of Dar http://www.antiqbook.com/boox/connie/books50000.shtml
Music Of Tanzania Mtindo Taarab History Of Tanzanian Popular The origin of the style is zaramo wedding music. includes songs in Hehe and Swahiliand uses indigenous rhythms 1 africa, Europe and the Middle East, pp 681689 http://www.masterliness.com/a/Music.of.Tanzania.htm
Extractions: var GLB_RIS='http://www.masterliness.com';var GLB_RIR='/cincshared/external';var GLB_MMS='http://www.masterliness.com';var GLB_MIR='/site/image';GLB_MML='/'; document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); Science People Non User Locations ... Timeline A2('N'); Index: A B C D ... Z A3('s','.','htm','','N'); Contents 1 Mtindo East African music Burundi Djibouti Eritrea Ethiopia ... Uganda The most internationally famous form of music from Zanzibar (one half of Tanzania with Tanganyika ) is taarab , which was invented by the Kiswahili Muslim minority . Taarab is played by a string using Egypt ian, India n, salsa and soukous Other forms of music include ngoma and muziki wa dansi . Tanzanian hip hop music is also popular, especially rappers like Dola Soul and Mr. II Joseph Mbilinyi a. II is one of the founders of the hip hip music scene in Tanzania. He has travelled around the world perfoming. He's respected among his peers for his outstanding contribution to helping the music business find its own direction. Tanzani A mtindo (pl.
Metafro Infosys - Swahili), lufambo, rufumbo, ufambo (Pare, Zigua, zaramo). Title The indigenous treesof Ethiopia.Second africa. Country Ivory Coast (We people). Vernacular name http://www.metafro.be/prelude/Localizer/view_symptom?si=H(051)
AAVIA ~ Tanzania indigenous ethnic groups 160 672,000; Bena 670,000; Kami 670,000; Shambala 664,000;zaramo 627,000; Nyakyusa 7 peoples Sandawe 80,000; the original San (Bushmen http://www.adoptavillageinafrica.com/tanzania2.htm
Extractions: Home About Us Be Informed ... Dem. Rep. Congo (Zaire) Ethiopia Ghana Kenya Nigeria Rwanda Somalia South Africa Sudan Tanzania Uganda Zambia Zimbabwe Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Rep. Chad Congo Dem. Rep. Congo (Zaire) Djibouti Equatorial Guinea Egypt Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Ivory Coast Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Reunion Rwanda Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Zambia Zanzibar Zimbabwe Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Rep. Chad Congo Dem. Rep. Congo (Zaire) Djibouti Equatorial Guinea Egypt Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Ivory Coast Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Reunion Rwanda Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Zambia Zanzibar Zimbabwe Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Rep.
Books From Coronet - Master Listing indigenous peoples and International Organizations Ritual and Symbol inTransitional zaramo Society with Special Reference to Women http://www.coronetbooks.com/books/atoz.html
Fortune N-S The Khoisan peoples of South africa; Bushmen and Hottentots. of the vocabulariesof three unpublished african languages Gindo, zaramo, and Angazidja. http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/africana/fortune3.htm
Extractions: Alphabetical Listing of Fortune Bibliography Select the first letter of the author (or title, where no author is listed): (N) (O) (P) (Q) ... (S) National Arts Foundation of Rhodesia. Arts Rhodesia. (Salisbury, Rhodesia: National Arts Foundation of Rhodesia, 1978). Title from cover. National Arts Foundation of Zimbabwe. Arts Zimbabwe. Salisbury, Zimbabwe: National Arts Foundation of Zimbabwe, 1982-. National Museums of Rhodesia. Occasional papers of the National Museums of Rhodesia Series A Human sciences. (Salisbury): National Museums of Rhodesia, 1971. National Museum and Art Gallery (Botswana) and Botswana Society. Botswana notes and records. Gaborone: s.n., n.d. Navess, B. T. A wutomi gi nene. Cleveland, Transvaal: Central Mission Press, 1956. Ncube, N. M. Ukungazi kufana lokufa. (Gwelo): Mambo Press, (1973). Ndangariro dzokunamata. Gwelo: Mambo press, 1966. Ndebele, J. P. Akusimlandu wami. Gwelo: Mambo Press, 1974. Ndebo mbuya yobuhe gwe ndzimu. London: British and Foreign Bible Society, 1942. Ndhlukula, N. P. IsiNdebele esiphezulu. Gwelo: Mambo Press, 1974. On cover: A manual of the Ndebele language.
Cities Feeding People in africa is assessing the use of indigenous african food crops, introduced inhabitants of Dar es Salaam, the zaramo, Ndengereko, and others were http://web.idrc.ca/openebooks/706-x/
SOMALI BANTU - Their History And Culture The mixing of the coastal Bantuspeaking African peoples with these Arab As a result, many indigenous Africans lost the customary coping methods that http://www.culturalorientation.net/bantu/sbhist.html
Extractions: SOMALI BANTU CULTURE PROFILE CHAPTER C ONTENTS P REFACE ... ORDER A PRINT COPY SCROLL TO: Colonial Period Slavery Social Impact of Slavery After Slavery ... Post Civil War History Persian and Arab traders established business contacts with east Africans over 1,000 years ago. These relations, coupled with refugees who fled the turmoil in Arabia after the death of the prophet Muhammad in the 7 th century, resulted in a significant number of Arab immigrants residing on the coast of east Africa. The mixing of the coastal Bantu-speaking African peoples with these Arab immigrants led to the emergence of the Swahili people and language. The Swahili people lived and worked for the next seven centuries with the indigenous African population. During this time, the Swahili people expanded their trade and communication further inland and to the south with other African groups, including ancestral tribes of the Somali Bantu. By the time the Portuguese arrived in the 15 th century, there existed a modern economy and advanced society on the east coast of Africa that some claim rivaled those in Europe. Portuguese colonial rule, however, disrupted the traditional local economic networks on the east African coast, resulting in a general breakdown of the once prosperous Swahili economy.
East Africa Living Encyclopedia The Swahili were, and are, an urban people living in stone towns up and The zaramo are a Bantu group that inhabit the area around Dares-Salaam and http://www.africa.upenn.edu/NEH/tethnic.htm
Lalonde, Andre (1991) African Indigenous Knowledge And Its Abstract The nature of indigenous and postcolonial traditional rural regions of African tribal groups KenyaMaasai; TanzaniaPare, zaramo, http://www.indiana.edu/~iascp/abstracts/321.html
Extractions: Conference: Presented at the second annual conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property (IASCP), Winnipeg, Manitoba, September 26-29, 1991. Abstract: "The nature of indigenous and post-colonial 'traditional' rural Africa, and the constraints or challenges this poses to the current maintenance and practical use of TEK, including the future transmission among indigenous Africans and development planners alike are examined. Main traditional livelihoods and land-use practices which sustainably exploit the ecosystem include sedentary and shifting agriculture, nomadic pastoralism, hunting, fishing, food gathering, rain forest use and limited agroforestry for food materials and medicines, etc. This is demonstrated, where possible, with case studies involving the following regions of African tribal groups: KenyaMaasai; TanzaniaPare, Zaramo, Luguru; Niger Fulani; and the San of the Kalahari. "A few promising options for development agencies to improve their understanding of dynamics of renewable resource management were outlined for integrating TEK into modern resource planning techniques such as environmental assessment and proactive environmental programming. Other promising TEK management applications include: i) Adaptive environmental management approach' ii) Participative rapid rural appraisal; iii) Popular education; and iv) Indigenous peoples and habitat conservation areas."