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الصفحة 57
The Protectorate Government distributed Arabica coffee seedlings in Bugisu in 1912 , and used the chiefs to enforce obligatory coffee cultivation . In 1931 , the BNA was licensed to buy coffee in order to ensure that prices remained ...
The Protectorate Government distributed Arabica coffee seedlings in Bugisu in 1912 , and used the chiefs to enforce obligatory coffee cultivation . In 1931 , the BNA was licensed to buy coffee in order to ensure that prices remained ...
الصفحة 60
These unions now collected the coffee in their areas and sold it directly to the BCS . At this time the reserve funds amounted to about £ 1,000,000 . The BCS opened a new office complex in Mbale , Bugisu's administrative centre ...
These unions now collected the coffee in their areas and sold it directly to the BCS . At this time the reserve funds amounted to about £ 1,000,000 . The BCS opened a new office complex in Mbale , Bugisu's administrative centre ...
الصفحة 70
2 Bugisu is the name of the district ; Bagisu is the plural form of Mugisu , a single member of this ethnic group . Some carlier studies have often called this group ' Gisu ' , but this is a stem which would never occur without a prefix ...
2 Bugisu is the name of the district ; Bagisu is the plural form of Mugisu , a single member of this ethnic group . Some carlier studies have often called this group ' Gisu ' , but this is a stem which would never occur without a prefix ...
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المحتوى
dry season migration from northwest Nigeria | 3 |
causes problems | 20 |
an indicator of nutritional stress in African agricultural | 31 |
حقوق النشر | |
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طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
administration African agricultural analysis appear become Bugisu cattle central centres century chiefs claims club colonial Committee concerned continued contribution cooperative cultural dependent discussion District early economic effects established ethnic example exchange farming fertility Fulbe given groups heads households important individual Institute interests International involved ISBN labour land language less lineage London major marriage material means migrants nature networks Nigeria noted occupations organization origin particular peasant period political population position possible present production projects reference region relations result role rule rural self-help social societies sources status structure suggests tion town trade traditional University University Press urban village women