Africa, المجلد 59Oxford University Press, 1989 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 82
الصفحة 328
... women . But although men received the bulk of their money from bridewealth , controlled land through patrilineages , and held the most prestigious titles , women were not without wealth , power and autonomy . They held important and ...
... women . But although men received the bulk of their money from bridewealth , controlled land through patrilineages , and held the most prestigious titles , women were not without wealth , power and autonomy . They held important and ...
الصفحة 342
... women referred to this disciplinary context as a ' time for war ' and ' when men wanted to kill us ' . Kedjom women cried ' Woolu , woolu ' , and beat their lips to reverberate the cry as an alarm call to action . It is no coincidence ...
... women referred to this disciplinary context as a ' time for war ' and ' when men wanted to kill us ' . Kedjom women cried ' Woolu , woolu ' , and beat their lips to reverberate the cry as an alarm call to action . It is no coincidence ...
الصفحة 345
... women are for the most part without formal political authority and gain their social identity through men . Kedjom society is patrilineal and relationships with men establish rights to a livelihood through access to land , to protection ...
... women are for the most part without formal political authority and gain their social identity through men . Kedjom society is patrilineal and relationships with men establish rights to a livelihood through access to land , to protection ...
المحتوى
Some issues of theory in the study of tenure relations in African agriculture | 6 |
Environment and access to resources in Africa | 18 |
Social institutions and access to resources | 36 |
حقوق النشر | |
24 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities African African Studies agricultural analysis appear Arab areas associated authority become central century chiefs coast colonial concerned continued crops cultural Digo discussion District East economic effects Embu example existing fact farm farmers given Herero holdings households important increased independence individual Institute interest International involved Islam issues Journal Kenya Kikuyu labour land less living London male marriage means notes official organisation origins Oxford particular period political population position possible practice present problem production question reference relations relatively Report result role rule rural situation social society soil songs status structure Studies suggests Swahili tenure Thuku trade traditional University Press village West woman women