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61. CATTLE BREEDS -- NGUNI
Embryo Plus is the leader in Embryo Flushing in africa for the past two decades . with the pastrolist cattle culture of the Negro/Bantu people of africa.
http://www.embryoplus.com/cattle_nguni.html
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CATTLE
[A-B]
[C-G] [H-M]
NAGORI ... RED SINDHI
NGUNI
The breed from the past for the future
Nguni cattle are a sub-type of the African Sanga cattle associated with the pastrolist cattle culture of the Negro/Bantu people of Africa. Protein analyses indicate that they have characteristics of both Bos Taurus and Bos Indicus cattle. Physiologically they have charateristics that place them apart from both types. What is certain is that they have been shaped by natural selection in the African environment for thousands of years. The ancestors of the present day Nguni of South Africa were brought into the country by the southward migration of the Khoi people from the central lakes area of Africa. These cattle are still found wherever the decendants of the original groups of the Nguni tribe settled, namely Swaziland, Zululand and Mozambique. The Nguni was originally, and indeed still is, a draft animal. Under sound management conditions it is becoming increasingly popular as a beef breed.

62. Association For Feminist Anthropology
and underlying complexities in the lives of people she encountered. an indigenous concept that all Fulbe seem to embrace and perform in various ways
http://sscl.berkeley.edu/~afaweb/reviews/kelly.htm
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Fulbe Voices: Marriage, Islam, and Medicine in Northern Cameroon
Helen A. Regis, Boulder: Westview Press, 2002 Reviewed by Hilarie Kelly, California State University, Fullerton Fulbe Voices: Marriage, Islam, and Medicine in Northern Cameroon is one of a series of books in Westview Case Studies in Anthropology. Series editor Edward Fischer states that the purpose of this series is to "recognize the peoples we study as active agents enmeshed in global as well as local systems of politics, economics, and cultural flows" (xi). Books in the series aim to combine both "rich humanistic and social scientific data borne of the dialectic engagement of fieldwork."(xi). Regis' book fulfills these purposes admirably. The subtitle is a bit misleading. This is a highly contextualized account of identity as it is performed in several overlapping dimensions: individual identity, gender identity, ethnic identity, village and national identity, and the global identity of Islam. These various dimensions of identity are presented through the commentary (voices) of individuals whom the author came to know during her research in one particular Cameroonian village. These voices are well supported by Regis' detailed discussion of relevant historical, ethnographic, and theoretical material. She peels back layer after layer of local and national discourse to reveal the really interesting contradictions and underlying complexities in the lives of people she encountered. The result is a lively and engaging book.

63. New Page 1
On behalf of the Somali Bantu / Jareer people in Somalia, Their physicalfeatures are of a typical African, such as flat nose, thick hair, dark skin,
http://www.somalibantu.com/Hist_Sombantu1.htm
Report Prepared By: OMAR A. ENO Subject: The Fifth Congress For Somali Studies In Boston Title: The Untold Apartheid In Somalia Imposed on Somali Bantu/Jareer People. Date: November 29, 1993 The Untold Apartheid Imposed On The Somali Bantu/Jareer People In Somalia INTRODUCTION On behalf of the Somali Bantu / Jareer people in Somalia, I would like to take this golden opportunity to congratulate you and to express my gratitude to the honorable College of Holy Cross for hosting this historic event of the 5 th Congress for Somali Studies. I would like to convey a special thanks to all the protagonists for their relentless effort, and to every staff member of the Holy Cross for their genuine support to the participants of this Congress. The significance and magnitude of this paper is intended to emphasis conspicuously and to elaborate in detail the perpetual and persistent atrocities committed against Bantu/Jarer people in Somalia. I appeal to every civilized person .to join me in the struggle to end the long-standing and on-going racism and discrimination which have caused untold sufferings to Bantu/Jarer people since Somalia was founded. This paper will also unveil some crucial information that has always been kept obscure and ambiguous to the outside world. The formidable history of Somali Bantu / Jarer people has been deliberately distorted and made insignificant by every Somali autarchy, as well as callous Somali scholars, who have deliberately contributed to misleading foreign writers.

64. Environmental Defense - Troubled Waters: World Bank Disasters Along Kenya's Tana
Throughout the 1980s, there were very few people at the Bank who cared aboutthe social The East African Wildlife Society, a Kenyan nongovernmental
http://www.environmentaldefense.org/article.cfm?contentid=1575

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