Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_T - Tanzania Regional History
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 6     101-107 of 107    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6 
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  

         Tanzania Regional History:     more detail
  1. Maziwi Island off Pangani (Tanzania): History of its destruction and possible causes (Regional seas) by Mario Fay, 1992
  2. Kilimanjaro: A Regional History: Production and Living Conditions 1800-1920 by Ludger Wimmelbucker, 2003-05-01
  3. Iron and regional history: Report on a research project in southwestern Tanzania by Marcia Wright, 1985
  4. Development for Exploitation: German Colonial Policies in Mainland Tanzania, 1884-1914, 2d ed. (book reviews): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Philip Stigger, 1996-08-01
  5. Working papers in planning by Tukumbi Lumumba-Kasongo, 1992

101. OSSREA Workshops
Development Issues and Structural Adjustment in tanzania. These are regional workshops exploring the state of the art in the teaching of and research in
http://www.ossrea.net/activities/workshops.htm
Thematic Workshops, Conferences, and Congresses
  • National Workshops Discipline-Focused Workshops Regional and International Thematic Conferences OSSREA Congress
    One of the approaches followed by OSSREA to realize its aim of promoting dialogue and interaction between social scientists, on the one hand, and between the scholars, development practitioners, and policy-makers, on the other hand, is the creation of public forums for the discussion and dissemination of research findings that are pertinent to development. Such forums have taken the form of national workshops, discipline-focused workshops, regional and international thematic conferences and the OSSREA Congress. These workshops and conferences have resulted in important publications.
National Workshops Initially, OSSREA had been organizing the National Workshops in collaboration with institutions in member countries. After the formation of the National Chapters, however, each one began to select a topic that is timely and relevant for that country and organised a national workshop in which members of its constituency and other experts in the field can presented papers and participated in the deliberations. This tradition has continued to-date although the timing of the workshops is irregular. So far the following National Workshops have been organised in various member countries:
  • The Indigenization of the Zimbabwe Economy: Problems and Prospects. (18-19 August 1994)

102. Aga Khan Health Services - Where AKHS Works
AKHS has facilities in Kenya and tanzania that provide over 600000 patients The history of AKHS hospitals and health centres in East Africa begins with
http://www.akdn.org/agency/akhswork.html
India - A doctor examines a baby with the help of a Lady Health Visitor at a health centre in Sidhpur (Photo by Jean-Luc Ray / AKF) Where Aga Khan Health Services Works East Africa India Pakistan Table of Programme Activities in Each Country
East Africa The AKDN work in health care in East Africa aims to assist countries in the building of effective, sustainable health systems linking different kinds of services and levels of care. It has an especially significant role to play as a private provider of hospital care in long-established, growing local institutions.
History
Both AKH-N and the Aga Khan Hospital in Dar es Salaam (AKH-Dar) have been expanded in recent years, inlcuding increases in the number of beds. The simultaneous expansion of ambulatory services and day care allows for the provision of more cost-effective care. Programmes for the development of clinical specialities, including cardiology, paediatrics, orthopaedics, and traumatology, are increasing the range of secondary and tertiary services which these hospitals are able to offer their patients.

103. African History
Professor James Giblin, Department of history, The University of Iowa This vast and denselyvegetated region would appear to be the African environment
http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/history/giblinhistory.html
Issues in African History
Professor James Giblin, Department of History, The University of Iowa Like the art of all peoples, the art of Africans expresses values, attitudes, and thought which are the products of their past experience. For that reason, the study of their art provides a way of learning about their history. Through the study of African art we can study the questions which have long preoccupied historians of Africa. This essay written by a historian who studies the African past presents an introduction to these questions. Its purpose is to encourage students to use their knowledge of African art to think about issues in African history. As students of African art begin to consider the African past, they must also consider how Western conceptions of "race" and "racial" difference have influenced our notions of the African past. These ideas, which have usually contrasted the presumed inferiority of black peoples with the superiority of whites, arose in Western societies as Europeans sought to justify their enslavement of Africans and the subsequent colonization of Africa. Historians now recognize that ideas of racial inferiority have inspired the belief that in the past African peoples lived in a state of primitive barbarism. At the same time, they have realized that many of the European writings which they use to reconstruct the African past such as accounts by nineteenth-century missionaries and travelers, for example are themselves tainted by these same notions of African inferiority.

104. University Of Chicago: Department Of Anthropology: About The Department
Maureen Anderson Abidjan Agni Region of M’batto, Cote d’Ivoire; Amy Stambach - Masama District, Kilamanjaro Region, tanzania (+ Dar es Salaam);
http://anthropology.uchicago.edu/about/africa.shtml
Africa
East Asia Western Europe Native North America ... Oceania, Australia, New Zealand
University of Chicago Anthropologists who work in Africa
Faculty
Students:

Preparing for the field

In the field
...
Recent PhDs
Faculty:
  • Jean Comaroff - Barolong, Botswana/South Africa; South Wales (UK); (history, colonialism and postcolonialism, ritual, medicine, the body, neoliberalism, crime, policing and public order) John Comaroff - Barolong (Tswana), Botswana/South Africa; (political and legal systems, historical anthropology, colonialism and postcoloniality, modernity and the politics of identity) Michael Dietler - Southern France; Kenya (Luo); (Archaeology and ethnoarchaeology, colonialism and postcoloniality, political economy, consumption, ritual, material culture, memory, identity politics) Kesha D. Fikes - Cape Verde Islands, Lusophone Africa, Portugal; (race and the bureaucracies of spatial mobility, the relationship between colonial migrant labor projects and post-colonial/post-independence migrant labor phenomena)
    James Fernandez - Gabon, Dahomey, Togo, Ghana, Natal; Asturias, Spain; Ethnohistorical research in Madrid, Barcelona, Castile, Hamburg, Berlin, Frankfort, Cologne, Paris

105. The History Cooperative | Conference Proceedings | Interactions: Regional Studie
For the first time the whole complex history of the world since the When the evidence allows us again to observe conditions in the region in Late
http://www.historycooperative.org/proceedings/interactions/burstein.html
STATE FORMATION IN ANCIENT NORTHEAST AFRICA
AND THE INDIAN OCEAN TRADE
Stanley M. Burstein
University of California at Los Angeles
The publication in 1974 of the first volume of Immanuel Wallersteins The Modern WorldËSystem was a milestone in the historiography of world history. For the first time the whole complex history of the world since the sixteenth century CE had been presented as part of single integrated process in which social and political structures were correlated with regional economic roles. Wallersteins by now familiar classification of world regions into core, semi-periphery, and periphery provided an elegant framework for analyzing the socio-economic history of the various regions in terms of their function in the World System. Wallersteins scheme has been criticized on many grounds including putative Eurocentrism and overemphasis on the significance of economic factors in history. Probably, no aspect of his work has drawn more criticism, however, than his insistence that the world system was uniquely characteristic of modern history because its appearance was dependent on the emergence of modern capitalism.

106. East Africa Living Encyclopedia
We have chosen the East Africa region for a number of reasons 1. Twentyfive percent of tanzania s land is designated as national parks or game
http://www.africa.upenn.edu/NEH/overview.html
East Africa Living Encyclopedia
About The Project East Africa - an Overview Teaching Swahili (Supported by a Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities
Kenya Tanzania ... Rwanda
East Africa - An Overview
Kenya Tanzania Uganda Rwanda , and Burundi . The Swahili-speaking area also extends into southern Somalia , eastern Democratic Republic of Congo , and parts of northern

107. GWP - Southern Africa
Rainfall is the dominant source of water in the region. To address the water demands in this water scarce region, Southern Africa s water sector is
http://www.gwpforum.org/servlet/PSP?iNodeID=133

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 6     101-107 of 107    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6 

free hit counter