Africa, المجلد 70،الأعداد 3-4Oxford University Press, 2000 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 36
الصفحة 624
... subsistence sectors - even today a few African and Asian countries with substantial rural subsistence sectors come quickly to mind - refocuses the issue on the destruction of subsistence agriculture , 800 years after Braudel says the ...
... subsistence sectors - even today a few African and Asian countries with substantial rural subsistence sectors come quickly to mind - refocuses the issue on the destruction of subsistence agriculture , 800 years after Braudel says the ...
الصفحة 641
... subsistence mode of production dependent on the availability of farmland must be forced into dependence on the market place . There are two ways this happens : natural population increase , leading to the abandonment of subsistence ...
... subsistence mode of production dependent on the availability of farmland must be forced into dependence on the market place . There are two ways this happens : natural population increase , leading to the abandonment of subsistence ...
الصفحة 642
... subsistence economy which reproduces itself they are not . 4. In subsistence economies development is a risky recurrent process , not evolutionary . It is not cyclical , either : the ethics and morals necessary to subsistence production ...
... subsistence economy which reproduces itself they are not . 4. In subsistence economies development is a risky recurrent process , not evolutionary . It is not cyclical , either : the ethics and morals necessary to subsistence production ...
المحتوى
AFRICA | 333 |
contrasting cultures | 359 |
the ideology of royal slavery in | 394 |
حقوق النشر | |
6 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
according activities adult African agricultural associated authority beating become called cattle central century chiefs child Christian claim colonial Comaroffs context continue countries course cultural described discussion Dizi dress early earth earth-eating economic emergence emir especially established ethnic example expressed father fields force Fulbe Ghana groups Hausa honour household identity Igbo important independence individual Institute International Islam Kano labour land living London married means meeting Muslim narratives Nigeria norms northern officials period policies political population position practice present production punishment reference relations religious remained result ritual royal slaves rules rural share social society South status stool structure style subsistence Suri Tanzania traditional Tswana University Press village violence witch women young