Africa, المجلد 65،الأعداد 1-2Oxford University Press, 1995 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 11
الصفحة 272
... Bireka , over the regulation of a roadside market . Women in Bireka who joined the Shabab al - watan used their membership as a rhetorical weapon in their fight against policies implemented by local agents of the government . Beating ...
... Bireka , over the regulation of a roadside market . Women in Bireka who joined the Shabab al - watan used their membership as a rhetorical weapon in their fight against policies implemented by local agents of the government . Beating ...
الصفحة 280
... Bireka . He and his two brothers were very active in village politics and the resolution of disputes , as the sheikh was rather ineffectual . Both the sheikh and the omda were nominally hereditary positions , though in practice over the ...
... Bireka . He and his two brothers were very active in village politics and the resolution of disputes , as the sheikh was rather ineffectual . Both the sheikh and the omda were nominally hereditary positions , though in practice over the ...
الصفحة 284
... [ Bireka villager , 1990 ] In 1989 the Regional Ministry of Co - operatives and UNICEF organised a grain bank project among the women of Bireka . The villagers contributed to the building of a storehouse , and UNICEF provided a large ...
... [ Bireka villager , 1990 ] In 1989 the Regional Ministry of Co - operatives and UNICEF organised a grain bank project among the women of Bireka . The villagers contributed to the building of a storehouse , and UNICEF provided a large ...
المحتوى
No 1 1995 | 95 |
Review Editor Rédacteur comptesrendus | 163 |
36 | 180 |
حقوق النشر | |
4 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Adja Adjòhoué African Studies agricultural agya analysis ancestors Andoni Anthropology areas arunsi authority Bireka borrowing boundaries brother Burgo capital cash CFA francs Christian colonial conflict context Créole crops cultural debt Devil dirges Dogbo Dossou economic elders ethnic farm farmers father gbeh gender Ghana githaka groups gyima Hausa Houé household Igbo Igede important income initiation International Islamic Kenya Kikuyu Komihoué Kondi Kpèkpè Krio labour land tenure language lineage living loans Lokossa London maize male ment Midob migrants Moba Murang'a District Nairobi Niger delta Nigeria Nuer nvasoɛ Nzema Ohafia organisation Oxford planting political practices problems production profit programmes relations ritual role rural satanic riches Sierra Leone slave social society structure Sudan Sudanese Tanzania theory tion Togo trade traditional trees University Press urban village wealth western witchcraft wives woman women World Bank Yok-Òbòlò