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         Cameroon Regional History Africa:     more detail
  1. Cameroon Country Study Guide (World Country Study Guide Library) by International Business Publications, USA, 2003-03-11

1. History Society And Culture Cameroon Africa Regional
History Society and Culture Cameroon Africa Regional now available, find more information on History.
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2. NHBS Science Bookstore Regional Natural History Africa
Regional Natural History Africa. An independent British company, we offer unrivalled coverage of books and CDs in Cameroon Freytag Berndt
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3. Web Directory
PlanetOut Search Regional Africa Cameroon History
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4. History Society And Culture Cameroon Africa Regional English
Encuentra el tipo de relaci n y persona que est s buscando ENTRAR Buscador Regional Africa Cameroon Society and Culture History
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5. History Society And Culture Cameroon Africa Regional English LoCuaL
Publicidad Web LoCuaL.com English Regional Africa Cameroon Society and Culture History
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6. Excite Italia - History Society And Culture Cameroon Africa
NEWS MP3 DIRECTORY Directory Regional Africa Cameroon Society and Culture History 1 siti nella categoria History
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7. Excite France - History Society And Culture Cameroon Africa
R PERTOIRE R pertoire Regional Africa Cameroon Society and Culture History 1 sites web dans la cat gorie History
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MP3 DIRECTORIO Directorio Regional Africa Cameroon Society and Culture History 1 sitios en la categoria History
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9. Formez - History Society And Culture Cameroon Africa
NEWS MP3 DIRECTORY Directory Regional Africa Cameroon Society and Culture History 1 siti nella categoria History
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10. Central Africa, 1800-1900 A.D. | Timeline Of Art History | The Metropolitan Muse
Timeline of Art history World Map regional Map. Central africa, 18001900 ADEncompasses cameroon, Central african Republic, Democratic Republic of
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/10/sfc/ht10sfc.htm
Encompasses Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Republic of Congo, Cabinda, and Angola
See also Eastern Africa Guinea Coast Southern Africa , and Western and Central Sudan The British ban on the international slave trade and the development of Arab-Swahili caravan routes from eastern Africa shifts the trade in slaves to the east. In western Central Africa, heightened demand for local African products such as ivory, wax, and rubber allows previously subjugated or isolated peoples such as the Chokwe to rise to economic prominence and displace traditional powers such as the far-flung Lunda and Luba states . Further east, the Arab-Swahili trade also deprives these polities of the trade on which they are dependent. The emergence of numerous small-scale chiefdoms results in the production of new forms of ornate and luxurious courtly arts across Central Africa. Elsewhere, extended periods of migration in present-day Gabon and political consolidation in modern Cameroon lead to the development of new forms of funerary and courtly art. The European partition of Africa in 1884 provides state support for German, Belgian, English, and Portuguese expeditions into Central Africa that supply newly created ethnographic museums and geographic societies with specimens of material culture from the region.

11. Archives - Pages From World Bank History: Cameroon
Pages from World Bank history cameroon IFC opened a regional mission forCentral africa in Douala on May 1, 1990, headed by Mr. Roger Blondel.
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTABOUTUS/EXTARCHIVES/0,,contentMDK:20
var templatePathPrefix = "http://siteresources.worldbank.org/"; Home Site Map Index FAQs ... Topics Search Archives All Home About Us Archives Pages from World Bank History: Cameroon History Chronology Access to Collections Search the Archives ... Special Archives Projects Site Tools Archives Registration Application
Pages from World Bank History: Cameroon
A brief look at 38 years of partnership between Cameroon and the Bank A brief look at 38 years of partnership between Cameroon and the Bank January 10, 2003 Cameroon is a Central African nation on the Gulf of Guinea, bordered by Nigeria, Chad, the Central African Republic, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, and Gabon. Bantu speakers were among the first groups to settle Cameroon, followed by the Muslim Fulani in the 18th and 19th centuries. The land escaped colonial rule until 1884, when treaties with tribal chiefs brought the area under German domination. After World War I, the League of Nations gave the French a mandate over 80% of the area, and the British 20% adjacent to Nigeria. After World War II, when the country came under a UN trusteeship in 1946, self-government was granted. At this time, the Cameroon People's Union emerged as the dominant party by campaigning for reunification and independence. In British Cameroon, unification was also promoted by the leading party, the Kamerun National Democratic Party. France set up Cameroon as an autonomous state in 1957, and the next year its legislative assembly voted for independence by 1960.

12. World History Connected | Vol. 2 No. 1 | 'The World In Miniature': Cameroon In W
history surveys today tend towards regional grand tours (West african It is here that cameroon, with its abovementioned reputation as africa in
http://worldhistoryconnected.press.uiuc.edu/2.1/mgilbert.html
'The World in Miniature': Cameroon in World History as seen through Documents, Film, Literature and Photographs
Marc Gilbert
North Georgia College and State University
It was the AHA's hope that its "Cameroon Study Group" would re-conceptualize the rich content of African history along broad themes that might be used to improve the teaching of Africa in the United States. This project succeeded insofar as it helped convince these scholars that a broader approach to all of world history, not merely Africa, was required in school curricula: many of the so-called Cameroon group were among the founding members the World History Association, including Kevin Reilly and Marilyn Hitchens, who served as its president, the late Ray Lorantas, who served as its first Executive Director and others, including Dana Greene and this writer, who served on its initial Executive Council.
Thanks to the efforts of the WHA and the pioneering work of African and world historians such as Philip Curtin, Pat Manning, and most recently, Eric Gilbert and Jonathan T. Reynolds (authors of Africa and World History , 2004), Africa now occupies a larger place in the world history curriculum than ever before. However, even the best of world history surveys today tend towards regional grand tours (West African constitutionalism, South and East African resistance movements) or thematic treatment (the era of independence) that are often conducted on the very cusp of teacher preparation (few teachers have in-depth training in one region of Africa, let alone all of them) and are often wanting in lecture exemplification, classroom activity and student learning opportunities beyond one or two issues, such as the slave trade.

13. History Department - University Of Colorado At Colorado Springs
Stanford University s african Studies Program regional web sites which aregeneral in Central africa including Burundi, cameroon,Congo (Brazzaville),
http://web.uccs.edu/history/globalhistory/africa.html
Faculty US History History Programs Senior Thesis ... R. Toolbox
African History
General Sources
Africa A-Z: African Studies on the Internet University of Pennsylvania's African Studies Center
The premier web resource for this field.
Index on Africa
more than 2000 links, continually updated
Afrique Franchophone The Electronic African BookWorm
A Web Navigator. Created by well-known bibliographer of African studies.
African South of the Sahara
Selected Internet Resources from Stanford University.
WoYaa!
an African Search engine.
The Kamusi Project with an Internet Swahili Dictionary Michigan's Electronic Library Links
Provides many diverse electronic resources.
The People's of Africa
Cataloged by country.
African Studies Association Also check out our African-American History Page!
back to top
See Also :
Michigan State University provides an excellent e-mail discussion group on African History (H-Africa) and H-West Africa on the history and culture of West Africa.
H-Africa also provides an excellent page of links to other on-line resources for historians.

14. Globalization And Africa's Regional And Local Responses -- Massamba Et Al. 39 (1
Economic history. African Studies Review 14(3) 425438 . African Stateand Society in the 1990s cameroon’s Political Crossroads.
http://jas.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/39/1-2/29

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Journal of Asian and African Studies, Vol. 39, No. 1-2, 29-45 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0021909604048248
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Guy Massamba The World Bank, USA Samuel M. Kariuki University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Stephen N. Ndegwa Program of African Studies, Northwestern University and UCLA Globalization Research Center, USA, As a response to globalization, the New Partnership indicative of a new awareness among African leaders that they must respond in ways that create empowering opportunities for African societies to benefit from, rather than be victims of, globalization. Following a epochs of globalization, we examine the relevance of leadership given the dismal record of past development efforts and given the hard choices pressed upon African societies by the dynamics of current globalization. We assert that the NEPAD can be

15. SOAS: SOAS: Centre Of African Studies: Members: Anthropology
Western and Equatorial africa, cameroon, Nigeria, Central african Republic His current, regional research focuses on material culture and history
http://www.soas.ac.uk/centres/centreinfo.cfm?navid=693

16. African Arts: Commercial Transactions And Cultural Interactions From The Delta T
Like others who do research in africa, I frequented local and regional markets The colonial history of cameroon s Southwest Province reinforced the
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0438/is_1_35/ai_90331353
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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 Commercial transactions and cultural interactions from the Delta to Douala and beyond African Arts Spring, 2002 by Rosalinde G. Wilcox
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Like others who do research in Africa, I frequented local and regional markets during my stay in Cameroon, from November 1988 through July 1989. The large markets draw traders from all over the country as well as from Nigeria, Ghana, and the Republic of Benin. Many are women selling local goods; men sell furniture, electronic equipment, and automotive products. On one trip to the market in the coastal town of Limbe, I saw a woman offering fabric she described as "George" cloth (1) obtained in nearby Nigeria. The seller identified herself as Suwu, an indigenous ethnic group of the Limbe and Bimbia regions of Cameroon's Southwest Province. After Limbe, her venues included small markets on the way to Bimbia. Since our itineraries coincided, I offered to take her by car, but she declined, preferring her canoe. I then left to visit villages bordering the neighboring creeks formed by the Mungo and Tiko rivers, especially Mabeta, Bimbia, and unmapped Ijo fishing settlements.

17. Untitled
Gender and Aquaculture Development in the africa Region cameroon has anaquaculture history typical of the region and has suffered many of the
http://www.fao.org/docrep/005/y4768e/y4768e09.htm
Africa Regional Activities
John Moehl
Regional Aquaculture Officer
FAO Regional Office for Africa
P. O. Box 1628, Accra, GHANA
john.moehl@fao.org
Gender and Aquaculture Development in the Africa Region
It is well acknowledged that African women are key players in the region’s agricultural sector, and that their participation is critical to achieving food security and economic well being. In many traditional agricultural enterprises, roles can be well defined along gender lines. However, most aquaculture systems are non-traditional and gender delineations less well documented. A large percentage of both market-orientated and non-market-orientated aquaculture systems in the region rely heavily, if not exclusively, on family labour. Although this labour may be somewhat segregated along gender lines, with men at times doing construction and women marketing, aquaculture is typically a family affair. All family members contribute to pond management and harvesting, including children. A case in point is the small-scale commercial fish farm of Mr and Mrs Awa in Yemssoa, Cameroon. Mrs Awa (photo) shares aquaculture management responsibilities equally with her husband and is the focal point for the majority of pond operations. Over the past few years, this family has developed a multi-pond complex with approximately a third of a hectare in catfish and tilapia production. Aquaculture is progressively replacing cocoa, the traditional cash crop, as the prime income earner.

18. Fulbright Scholar Stories: AFRICA [Sub-Sahara]
July 2000January 2001 (African regional Research Program). cameroon Benedict Der, Professor and Chair, Department of history, University of Cape Coast
http://www.cies.org/stories/africa.htm
Register Contact Us Search Directories Discipline Agriculture American History American Literature Art Biological Sciences Business Administration Chemistry Computer Science Economics Education Engineering Environmental Sciences Geography Geology History Law Library Science Linguistics Medical Sciences Music Philosophy Political Science Psychology Public Aministration Religious Studies TEFL/Applied Linguistics World Area Africa East Asia and the Pacific Europe Eurasia South Asia Western Hemisphere U.S. Institution

19. Specialised Theme 9
regionalism in africa the Creation of a Northern cameroon Identity; Gerald Friesen, Is it Time to Give Up on regional history in the United States?
http://www.oslo2000.uio.no/program/st09.htm
Specialised Themes
9. Regions and regionalisation
Tuesday, 8 August, 9:00-12:00
Building A, Auditorium 2 Organiser:
Einar Niemi, Norway Discussant:
Pierangelo Schiera, Italy Introduction:
The later years have seen not only a fervid scholarly debate on nationalism, but also on regionalism and regionalisation, with focus on the region as geopolitical concept. The region is of course not a late modern invention, nor historical studies of it. Its roots are e.g. to be found in German, French and American historical research in the nineteenth century; in many countries historical work on the region has in the twentieth century developed into a specialised discipline. However, the last few decades regional studies have been innovated, partly as a product of the new focus on nationalism and the obvious affinities and relations there are between these two phenomenons, partly as an outcome of the political debates and processes in the European Union, as well as in other parts of the world, in which regional co-operation is regarded as important, as a tool for political and economic integration. There are in particular three main questions which will be studied in the papers presented in the session. Firstly, what is a region? The typology includes a wide range of varieties, as to territoriality as well as to functions and ideology. Typology will be discussed both theoretically and empirically. Secondly, what are the relations between state and region? The relations may develop through historical phases; often there are tensions between centre, represented by state authorities, and periphery, represented by regionalism; in other cases the picture may be more harmonious. Thirdly, what is the nature of regionalism and the building of regions? Its aims as well as methods may differ from case to case; sometimes there is a separatistic dimension with it, in other cases region building and nation building merge.

20. Central African Independence
Central africa cameroon Congo, DRC - Sao Tome Principe GazetteerIndex page african history 16 June Soweto Uprising The Afrikaans Medi.
http://africanhistory.about.com/library/bl/bl-Independence-CA1.htm
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Cameroon
Official name: Republic of Cameroon
Independence from France and Britain: 1960/61
The region was inhabited by north-western Bantu societies and was typified by the Duala who had established themselves as a centralized state in the 18th century and prospered form the trade in slaves from the Bamenda grasslands of the interior. It was under the nominal influence of the British until it was annexed by Germany in 1884. In 1919, following the First World War, Cameroon was divided between the French and the British. In 1955 the French killed 10,000 locals during a revolt, and the continued disturbances resulted in the French sector declaring independence in 1960. The British southern sector joined Cameroon in 1961 whilst the northern sector voted to join Nigeria.
Central African Republic, CAR

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