Africa, المجلد 62Oxford University Press, 1992 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 77
الصفحة 144
labour of their children . With cash cropping , husbands and fathers challenge this control as they try to divert labour to their own fields . At peak labour seasons , women contributed 50 per cent of the labour hours ; children over 10 ...
labour of their children . With cash cropping , husbands and fathers challenge this control as they try to divert labour to their own fields . At peak labour seasons , women contributed 50 per cent of the labour hours ; children over 10 ...
الصفحة 555
... labour in agricultural production , i.e. women's rotating labour groups . FROM AUTONOMOUS FOOD PRODUCERS TO ' HELPING ' WIVES As already mentioned , present - day morik groups have their historical roots in kokwet labour . In the past a ...
... labour in agricultural production , i.e. women's rotating labour groups . FROM AUTONOMOUS FOOD PRODUCERS TO ' HELPING ' WIVES As already mentioned , present - day morik groups have their historical roots in kokwet labour . In the past a ...
الصفحة 557
... labour services among members , has replaced participation in more traditionally organised groups such as morik groups . The church groups found among Kipsigis women cut across all socio - economic strata . In the case of Paulina the ...
... labour services among members , has replaced participation in more traditionally organised groups such as morik groups . The church groups found among Kipsigis women cut across all socio - economic strata . In the case of Paulina the ...
المحتوى
smell as a social frontier among the KapsikiHigi | 38 |
Ethnoveterinary medicine in Africa | 59 |
Traders brokers and market crisis in southern Somalia | 94 |
حقوق النشر | |
7 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities administration African agricultural animals areas Asante associated authority become Cambridge cattle cent central Church claims collective colonial crops cultural dependent discussion District economic example export fact farm farmers gender given groups head household human important increased individual Institute interest International interpretation involved issue Kenya Kipsigis knowledge labour land less living London male means nature noted officials organisations period political population possible practices present problems production question reference region relations relationship relatively ritual role rule rural smell social society sources South structure suggests symbolic tion town trade traditional University Press urban village West Western women young