Africa, المجلد 66Oxford University Press, 1996 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 58
الصفحة 117
... original inhabitants of much of the area . But members of other ethnic groups , such as the Manjaku , who did much of the original forest clearing , and Creoles , or métis ( person of Portuguese ancestry ) , who were very numerous up to ...
... original inhabitants of much of the area . But members of other ethnic groups , such as the Manjaku , who did much of the original forest clearing , and Creoles , or métis ( person of Portuguese ancestry ) , who were very numerous up to ...
الصفحة 254
... original settlers of their present home . Although both Rattray ( 1923 : 121 n . 1 ) and Wilks ( implicitly ) dismiss such traditions , archaeologists have found them valuable in yielding early Akan material . Merrick Posnansky , for ...
... original settlers of their present home . Although both Rattray ( 1923 : 121 n . 1 ) and Wilks ( implicitly ) dismiss such traditions , archaeologists have found them valuable in yielding early Akan material . Merrick Posnansky , for ...
الصفحة 599
... original thirty household heads had died . A few had moved to other land on Kilimanjaro . But nine survivors of the original thirty household heads continued to live on the lineage lands where they had lived in 1968-69 . Now most of ...
... original thirty household heads had died . A few had moved to other land on Kilimanjaro . But nine survivors of the original thirty household heads continued to live on the lineage lands where they had lived in 1968-69 . Now most of ...
المحتوى
JAMES FAIRHEAD AND MELISSA LEACH | 14 |
Pastoralism biodiversity and the shaping of savanna landscapes | 37 |
Biodiversity on the farm | 52 |
حقوق النشر | |
30 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities administration African agricultural Akan argued associated authority become beliefs biodiversity Cambridge cent century chiefs colonial concept conservation context continued crop cult cultivation culture disease District diversity early East ecology economic environment established example fact farmers farming field fire forest forms Ghana groups household human important increase indigenous individual Institute interest International Kenya knowledge labour land less living LoDagaa London major means missionaries nature northern noted original past patterns period plant political population position possible practices present problems production recent refer region relations remained result rice ritual savanna season Sierra Leone slave smiths social society species spirit structure suggests traditional trees tumbura University Press vegetation village West women World