Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_M - Mambila Indigenous Peoples Africa
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

61. Web Sites For Anthropologists
African Music Archive, Institute of Ethnology and African Studies, JohannesGutenbergUniversity indigenous peoples and national minorities worldwide
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/links.htm
National Anthropological Archives and Human Studies Film Archives What's New About the Archives ... Contact Ethnographic Archives Anthropology at the Smithsonian
Resources for Anthropologists Most Entertaining Online Ethnography Ethnographic Archives

62. Anthropology Research Guide - Marriott Library
Regional expertise is strongest in africa, Australia, New Guinea, Their goalis to promote rights, voices, and visions of indigenous people.
http://www.lib.utah.edu/ResGuides/anthropology.html
U N I V E R S I T Y O F U T A H - J. WILLARD MARRIOTT LIBRARY Anthropology
R E S E A R C H G U I D E
Research Guides

Library Catalog

Learning More

Purchase Suggestion
... RESEARCH TIPS The Anthropology Department at the University of Utah focuses primarily on regional prehistory and ethnography. It has a special emphasis on genetics,behavioral ecology, demography, hunter-gatherers, and evolutionary approaches to human behavior. Regional expertise is strongest in Africa, Australia, New Guinea, the Middle East, and western North America. Marie Paiva U of U Department of Anthropology FIND JOURNAL ARTICLES return to top
Use these indexes to identify articles, conference papers etc. from scholarly sources.
  • You will get a citation (author, title, source, date) and often an abstracta short summary. Marriott won't own all items listed; search UNIS by the journal name to find if we do. If not, you may request a copy through UTAD ) or Interlibrary Loans Access varies depending on your location and status Personalized help available at the Library Reference Desks. See also:

63. Afrol News: Masses Of Fulani Flee From Nigeria To Cameroon
of the population occupy 85 percent of the entire mambila land, Yieji violent conflictsin Nigeria between socalled settlers and indigenous people, which have
http://afrol.com/News2002/nig008_bororo_cam.htm
Masses of Fulani flee from Nigeria to Cameroon Related items News articles
17.06.2002 - Protest against torture of Cameroon's M'bororo

30.05.2002 - More Fulanis killed in Nigeria

11.04.2002 - Thousands of Nigerian herdsmen flee to Cameroon

23.02.2002 - Masses of Fulani flee from Nigeria to Cameroon
...
07.05.2001 - Responsibility fight over oil blowout in Nigeria
Pages
Nigeria News

afrol Cameroon

News, Africa
Background
History: Rise and Fall of the Adamawa Emirate
In Internet
Federal Government of Nigeria Misanet.com / IRIN / afrol News, 23 February - At least 23,000 Fulani herders have fled Nigeria's eastern Taraba State to Cameroon to escape clashes which broke out in the Mambila plateau with farming communities at the beginning of the year, a pastoral association said. The Miyetti Alla Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) said in a statement made available to IRIN on Friday, it had counted 23,647 nomads who fled the Sarduana local government area of Taraba State into Cameroon. Fulani herdsmen, M'bororo, are kin to the people establishing the Sokoto Caliphate in northern Nigeria and Cameroon in the 19th century. According to the statement signed by MACBAN secretary general, Tukur Abashe; "Attacks on Fulani pastoralists who produce 75 percent of the protein needs of the country are becoming incessant, particularly in states like Plateau, Nasarawa, Bauchi, Taraba and Benue states."

64. Quentin Gausset - CV
Postdoc in the PETREA research programme (People, Trees and Agriculture in africa) Equal citizen rights versus indigenous collective rights Internal
http://mac18.anthro.ku.dk/~quentin/
Quentin GAUSSET
Courses given in Autumn 2005: Development Anthropology Anthropology and the environment Quantitative methods Curriculum
Education

Academic positions

Fieldworks

Fields of Research
... Papers
Work address:
Quentin GAUSSET
Institute of Anthropology (University of Copenhagen)
˜ster Farimagsgade, 5
DK - 13530 Copenhagen K.
Denmark
Tel: (+45) 35 32 34 73
Fax: (+45) 35 32 34 65 e-mail: quentin.gausset@anthro.ku.dk
Born:
27/03/1969, in Ixelles (Brussels, Belgium)
Main Education October 1993 - September 1997 Research Fellow at the National Funds for Scientific Research of Belgium ( FNRS Awarded a PhD in Anthropology from the Free University of Brussels in March 1997 with "The Highest Distinction". The members of the Jury were Richard Fardon, Pierre de Maret, Luc de Heusch, Philippe Jespers, Baudouin Janssens, Tal Tamari September 1988 - June 1992 Studied four years of Anthropology at the Free University of Brussels. Awarded a Master (" Licence ") in Anthropology at the Free University of Brussels in June 1992 with "The Highest Distinction". The members of the jury were Luc de Heusch, Pierre de Maret, Pierre Van Leynseele Academic positions Since January 2005 Associate Professor at the Institute of Anthropology University of Copenhagen March 2002 - December 2004 Post-doc in the PETREA research programme (People, Trees and Agriculture in Africa), in collaboration with the CNSF in Burkina Faso and the university of Morogoro in Tanzania

65. A & B Anthropology SuperSite
For example, view historic photos made in africa by HR Acebes and in the Survey this site for the collection of indigenous People s Literature.
http://www.ablongman.com/html/anthro/cult-act1.html
Enjoy these cultural anthropology web activities!
PART I FOUNDATIONS OF CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Archaeology, Physical/Biological Anthropology, and Primatology
  • Explore current archaeological research projects and sites. Do any projects also involve linguistic, physical, and cultural anthropology? How? Why might it be important to study the linkages between the four fields of anthropology?
  • Explore this richly illustrated site on ancient civilizations of Mexico and Central America . How does archaeology contribute to the understanding of prehistoric and ancient food production and other economic activities? How were the economies of the Maya, Mixtec, Zapotec, and Aztec civilizations similar and different?
  • Use links to see a map and images of Copan and other Mayan sites in Honduras and Guatemala. Then read about the discovery of the tomb of a female Mayan chief, Margarita , also called "the Red Lady," in the necropolis of Copan. How were her treasures looted in 1997 and later returned ? Why has the National Geographic Society had to revise its web feature, "The Lords of Copan"?
  • Read a definition and explanation of sociobiology and an essay by its founder, Edward O. Wilson, and explore the issue of
  • 66. African Studies: Education And Teaching Resources
    AFROPHILE Recommended Titles on africa for Children and Young People, 1996. african indigenous Science and Knowledge Systems Page (Dr. Gloria Emeagwali
    http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/cuvl/teaching.html
    CU Home Libraries Home Search Site Index ... Help Search Library Catalog: Title (start of title) Journal (start of title) Author (last, first) Keyword (and, or, not, "") Subject Go To CLIO >> Find Databases: Title Keywords Title (start of title) Keywords Go To Databases >> Find E-Journals: Title (start of title) Title Keywords Subject Keywords Go To E-Journals >> Search the Libraries Website: Go To Advanced Website Search >> About the Libraries Libraries Collections Digital Collections Hours Directions to Columbia Map of Campus Libraries More... Catalogs CLIO (Columbia's Online Catalog) Other Catalogs at CU and Nearby A-Z List of Library Catalogs Course Reserves More... E-Resources Citation Finder Databases E-Journals E-Books E-Data E-News E-Images Subject Guides More...

    67. The City Review - Sotheby's Tribal Arts Previews And Recaps RAND AFRICAN ART
    with indigenous repairs, and highly decorated on the exterior with a repertoire Lot 97 is a fine mambila helmut mask that has expressive volumetric
    http://www.randafricanart.com/Sothebys_auctions_results_City_Review.html
    http://www.thecityreview.com/home.html
    Sotheby's Tribal Arts auctions previews and recaps
    I will include the preview and recap from the most recent auction in it's full text below
    or you can click on a link below to go to the archive page for previous auctions.
    They will open in a new window.
    Archives
    Preview and recap of Tribal Art auction November 14, 2003 at Sotheby's

    Preview and recap of Arts of Africa, Oceania and the Americas auction May 15, 2003 at Sotheby's

    Recap of Tribal, Oceanic and Northwest Coast Art auction at Sotheby's November 16, 2001

    Preview and recap of Arts of Oceania, Africa and the Americas auction at Sotheby's May 19, 2001
    ...
    Recap of Tribal and Oceanic Art auction at Sotheby's, Nov. 22, 1998
    I am a little behind on this page, I will update it soon African and Oceanic Art Sotheby's 10:15AM, November 11, 2004 (Lots 1-132) Sale 8029 Lot 22, "Flute-stopper Male Figure," New Guinea, Lower Sepik River, Yuat By Carter B. Horsley Once again Sotheby's has put its Pre-Columbian Art auction into the same catalogue as its African and Oceanic Art auction. See the separate article on the Pre-Columbian Art auction that occurs at 2PM November 11, 2004.

    68. Joshua Project - Peoples By Country Profiles
    Country Code NI. Continent africa. Region africa. 10/40 Window No. People. SubmitUpdate People Name This Country GamoNingi. People Name General Gamo-Ningi
    http://www.joshuaproject.net/peopctry.php?rop3=103178&rog3=NI

    69. BU Libraries | African Studies Library | Acquisition Archive March 2005
    Rwanda Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia South africa indigenous Forestsand Woodlands in South africa Policy, People and Practice.
    http://www.bu.edu/library/asl/acquisitionsarchive/mar2005.html
    Acquisition Archive March 2005
    Africa - General East Southern West ... Zimbabwe
    Africa - General
    Africa at the Crossroads: Between Regionalism and Globalization.
    Edited by John Mukum Mbaku. Westport : Praeger, 2004.
    HC 800 A5.5332 2004
    Africa in the New Millennium: Challenges and Prospects.
    Pretoria, South Africa : Africa Institute of South Africa, 2001.
    HC 800 A55336 2000 African Archaeology: A Critical Introduction . Series: Blackwell
    Studies in Global Archaeology ; 3. Edited by Ann Brower Stahl.
    Oxford : Blackwell, 2005.
    DT 13 A354 2005
    African Environment and Development: Rhetoric, Programs, Realities.
    Series: King's SOAS Studies in Development Geography . Edited by William G. Moseley. Aldershot : Ashgate, 2004. HC 800 29 E528 2004 African Savannas: Global Narratives and Local Knowledge of Environmental Change. Edited by Thomas J. Bassett. Portsmouth :

    70. Anthro-l: September-1994 By Thread
    mambila documentation on WWW zeitlyn@VAX.OX.AC.UK; Student request NA pen palMike Diehl Re indigenous folks protect environment? Matthew McGuire
    http://www.anatomy.usyd.edu.au/danny/anthropology/anthro-l/archive/september-199
    anthro-l: september-1994 by thread
    Starting: Thu Sep 01 1994 - 02:42:22 EST
    Ending: Fri Sep 30 1994 - 23:41:43 EST
    Messages:

    71. Barbier-Mueller Museum (3)
    Traditional peoples themselves viewed their shields in a variety of ways The mambila and Wuli of Cameroon, for example, used the surface patterns and
    http://pittweb.prm.ox.ac.uk/Kent/shieweap/bouclie3.html
    Shields in the Barbier-Mueller Museum (3)
    Introduction Foreword to catalogue Review of form, function and contextualisation of shields Shield labels
    Form, Function and Contextual Framework: Shields in the Collection of the Barbier-Mueller Museum
    Shields were the most extensively utilized form of defensive weapons in the world. Principally used as bodily protection against missiles and as weapons with which to actively parry blows, bearers wielded shields just as effectively to launch offensive attacks, carry magico-religious protective medicines, and create visual noise to confuse or frighten the enemies. The Kalinga of Northern Philippines, for example, used multipronged shields to ambush their victims and pin them to the ground between the prongs in preparation for beheading. To aid with the owner's defense and offense, the Kenyah-Kayan of Borneo painted their shields on the obverse and reverse sides with elaborate double images of the aso -dragon, part of a complex series of soul-protecting measures that extended to traditional patterns on woven cloth, warriors' metal ornaments, and healers' charms. roromaraugi ... , for example, originally functioned as a parrying shield and was held along the pole shaft. The Trobriand

    72. Anthropology - Publications Anthropology RDF, 891kb RDF Zip, 71kb
    A survey of articles published in the South African Medical Journal between Nuttall MA, Protecting the Arctic indigenous peoples and Cultural Survival
    http://www.hyphen.info/rdf/hero/37_ra2_coauthor.php
    Anthropology - Publications Anthropology RDF RDF Zip People Publications ... BOTTOM
    • 1200 Publication References
    Author Title Date Place of Publication ... Leader-Williams N Designing the ark: setting priorities for captive breeding University of Kent at Canterbury Conservation Biology and Biodiversity Management A Balmford
    G M Mace WARD RH Estimating Scandinavian and Gaelic ancestry in the male settlers of Iceland University of Oxford A Helagson
    S Sigurouardottier
    J Nicholson Bodmer RE Effect of hunting on source-sink systems in the Neotropics University of Kent at Canterbury Conservation Biology and Biodiversity Management A J Novaro
    K H Redford REYNOLDS V Nesting behaviour of chimpanzees: Implications for censuses University of Oxford A J Plumptre Dawson A After Writing Culture: epistemology and praxis in contemporary anthropology University of Hull A James
    J Hockey Christensen PH Research With Children: perspectives and practices University of Hull A James James A Theorising Childhood University of Hull A Prout
    C Jenks REYNOLDS V Cultures in Chimpanzees University of Oxford A Whiten
    J Goodall
    W C McGrew Theodossopoulos D The land people work and the land the ecologists want: Indigenous land valorisation in a rural Greek community threatened by conservation law University of Wales, Lampeter

    73. The Tribune, Chandigarh, India - World
    “We all know that killing innocent people for political ends is terrorism. Local residents said on Tuesday that fighting between mambila indigenous
    http://www.tribuneindia.com/2002/20020109/world.htm
    Wednesday, January 9, 2002, Chandigarh, India
    W O R L D China may refrain from backing Pak
    Beijing qualifies support in case of war
    Beijing, January 8
    China today called on India to take steps to settle a stand-off with nuclear arch-rival Pakistan, but signalled Beijing’s support for Islamabad did not amount to a commitment to back its old ally in case of war. India still pursuing N-plan: CIA
    Washington, January 8
    India is continuing with its nuclear weapons development programme for which the underground tests in May, 1998, were a significant milestone, the US intelligence agency CIA says in an unclassified report.
    WFP operations extended to Herat

    Geneva, January 8 The UN food agency started aid operations in the western Afghan city of Herat for the first time since September on Tuesday but elsewhere hundreds of thousands remained in need because it was too dangerous. A spokeswoman for the World Food Programme (WFP) said the agency had started providing enough food to feed 340,000 people.
    Malaysian paramedic Tarmizi Ismail collects registration slips from Afghan refugees for treatment at the Pakistan- Afghanistan border of Chaman on Tuesday. More than 50 paramedics from Malaysia's armed forces have set up their base at the refugee camp to give free medical aid for refugees. — Reuters photo

    74. Marcon International, Inc. - Ship Brokers & Marine Consultants
    source of both fuelwood for the indigenous people and a in 19931994 in which 1,400people were killed MW hydroelectric power project on the mambila Plateau in
    http://marcon.com/marcon2c.cfm?SectionListsID=93&PageID=416

    75. Nigeria: Tourism In Nigeria
    caves and temperate climate areas such as Obudu, jos and mambila Plateau. It has a herd of forest elephants, the whitefaced monkey (indigenous to
    http://www.onlinenigeria.com/travel/index.asp
    Home News Forums Directory ...
    Settings
    Top Searches: Oluchi Onweagba NYSC Government Population of Nigeria ...
    Settings
    Worldwide USA Nigeria UK Germany Advanced Search
    Settings
    Alumni Search: LASU UNILAG ABU UNIPORT ...
    Settings
    White Pages: Okafor Aluko Ibrahim Tonye ...
    Settings
    Directory: States Of Nigeria Business Shopping Advanced Search ...
    Settings
    News: National Sports Business Delta Region ... Embassies Tourism In Nigeria: Nigeria offers a wide variety of tourist attractions such as extended and roomy river and ocean beaches ideal for swimming and other water sports, unique wildlife, vast tracts of unspoiled nature ranging from tropical forest, magnificent waterfalls, some new rapidly growing cities and climatic conditions in some parts particularly conducive to holidaying. Other attractions include traditional ways of life preserved in local customs; rich and varied handicrafts and other colourful products depicting or illustrative of native arts and lifestyle, and the authentic unsophisticated but friendly attitude of many in the Nigerian population.

    76. CAMNET Archives -- July 2005 (#25)
    COM Subject CAMEROON HISTORY The peoples of Bamenda Comments To ACCFOC Little is known about the indigenous inhabitants; but,
    http://listserv.cnr.it/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0507&L=camnet&F=&S=&P=3028

    77. Analysis
    30. the conflict on the mambila Plateau in 20012002; According to this view,there are the original, autochtonous, indigenous, inhabitants of the area
    http://www.ceddert.com/analysis-02-01-03-6.htm
    This Account Has Been Suspended Please contact the billing/support department as soon as possible.

    78. Archaeolink.com Archaeology, Anthropology, Social Studies, General Knowledge
    indigenous Studies by region. africa. africa, african Anthropology GeneralResources Asian indigenous and Tribal People - General Resources
    http://archaeolink.com/
    The Amazing This place is designed to provide students and others interested in the fields of archaeology, anthropology, and ancient civilizations a one stop resource for homework help or other projects. While that is still the main theme of the site, it is now expanding into other realms and disciplines ranging from gardening to astronomy and much more. You will find numerous resources (currently over fifteen thousand and climbing ) divided by topic. best viewed with 600 x 800 resolution. Web archaeolink.com For your convenience, you may explore each section from its own index, found immediately below - - Or, to explore the whole website from one place, just scroll on down this page ( site map ) picking and choosing what you like. Archaeology Pages Index - General archaeological information plus archaeology by region era, and specialty plus much more. Anthropology Pages Index - General anthropology information; cultural, linguistic, early man, cyberanthropology; plus indigenous peoples; by tribe and region; peoples of Africa, Asia, South America, religious anthropology and more.

    79. Review Of African Crossroads And Kingdom On Mount Cameroon
    African Crossroads Intersections between History and Anthropology in Cameroon; of foreign populations for an indigenous people during the colonial era.
    http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/dz/xroads/historian.html
    Review of African Crossroads and Kingdom on Mount Cameroon
    THE HISTORIAN Vol LX, No. 4, Summer 1998 pp 842-3.
    The Historian is a publication of Phi Alpha Theta, the History National Honor Society
    African Crossroads: Intersections between History and Anthropology in Cameroon; Cameroon Studies, Volume 2. Edited by Ian Fowler and David Zeitlyn. (Providence and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 1996, Pp. xviii, 213. $29.95.)
    Kingdom on Mount Cameroon: Studies in the History of the Cameroon Coast, 1500-1970; Cameroon Studies, Volume 1. By Edwin Ardener. Edited and with an Introduction by Shirley Ardener. (Providence and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 1996. Pp. xix, 380. $49.95.) In fact, both of these volumes stand at the methodological crossroads between history and anthropology in that they strive to unravel the sometimes-obscure chronology and context of the Cameroonian past using the tools and approaches of both of those disciplines. The first volume of the series constitutes a partial collection of the efforts of a scholar whose work mainly appeared in the 1950s and 1960s "when Cameroon Studies were in their relative infancy" (xviii). The second, dedicated to another ground-breaking researcher in the field, E. M. Chilver, is a diverse assembly of papers by more recent researchers who build on earlier work on the Bamenda Grassfields of Cameroon. In African Crossroads: Intersections between History and Anthropology in Cameroon, Ian Fowler and David Zeitlyn lead off with a discussion of the scholarly controversies surrounding the economic and linguistic diversity of the Grassfields area. An emphasis is placed on the "Tikar Problem", wherein the many dynasties claiming descent from the Tikar have neither linguistic nor cultural commonalities among them. The editors suggest that the Tikar introduced a "model" for a tribe, which Grassfields, chiefdoms emulated by claiming origin from them. Richard Fardon, in the first essay, "The Person, Ethnicity and the Problem of Identity in West Africa," confirms the view that the identity of the Chamba seems to be a product of the retrojection of the tribe's collective memory into a comprehensive historical narrative in which they could not have participated.

    80. Nigeria Country Analysis Brief: Environmental Issues
    for the indigenous people and a habitat for the area s biodiversity, Compared to other large African states, Nigeria s energy intensity is at the
    http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/nigenv.html
    Home Country Analysis Briefs Nigeria: Environmental Issues PDF version PDB version July 2003 Introduction Air and Marine Pollution Energy Consumption Carbon Emissions ... Environmental Outlook Nigeria: Environmental Issues Introduction
    Ever since the discovery of oil in Nigeria in the 1950s, the country has been suffering the negative environmental consequences of oil development. The growth of the country's oil industry, combined with a population explosion and a lack of environmental regulations, led to substantial damage to Nigeria's environment, especially in the Niger Delta region, the center of the country's oil industry. The country also faces environmental challenges from air pollution and desertification, with the encroachment of the Sahara Desert in the north and severe air pollution in overcrowded cities such as Lagos and Abuja. The Niger Delta's main environmental challenges result from oil spills, gas flaring and deforestation. Oil spills in the Niger Delta have been a regular occurrence, and the resultant degradation of the surrounding environment has caused significant tension between the people living in the region and the multinational oil companies operating there. It is only in the the past decade that environmental groups, the Nigerian federal government, and the foreign oil companies that extract oil in the Niger Delta have begun to take steps to mitigate the damage. Air and Marine Pollution

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter