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41. AAA Newsletter25
of African Traditional Religion The owo Experience, The of the history of Africanpeoples brought to the on the following topics indigenous Knowledge Systems
http://www.newsouthassoc.com/newsletter25.html
African-American Archaeology
Newsletter of the African-American Archaeology Network
Applied Archaeology and History Associates, 615 Fairglen Lane, Annapolis, MD 21401: ISBN 1060-0671
Number 25, Fall 1999
John P. McCarthy, Editor Message from the Editor I have several items to bring to your attention at this time: 2) Subscription Renewals ­ Far too many of you have not renewed your subscription for 1999. Not to put too fine a point on it, but the newsletter is in rather dire financial shape. Please check your label - if says "98" after your name, this is your last newsletter unless you pay your 1999 fee. I also encourage everyone to renew for 2000 as soon as possible ­ see the next item. 4) Compilation Volume - A bound compilation of issues 1-25 of A-A A is in production for a January roll-out. In addition to copies of the first 25 issues of the newsletter, the compilation will include several specially commissioned essays and an index to major articles. I anticipate that the volume will sell for approximately $25.00. Stay tuned for more details as this project develops. 5) Contributions - We are always looking for substantive contributions to A-A A. Please consider the newsletter as your direct pipeline to the community of scholars with whom you most want to share the results of your work, "float trial balloons," etc.

42. The Yoruba Today
The cocoa industry spread to Ondo and owo in the and Ife, are interspersed with peoplesspeaking other of the Saro and the indigenous Lagosians increasingly
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/YorubaT/yt1.html
The Yoruba Today
J.S. Eades
(Originally published by Cambridge University Press 1980)
Author's note on the online version
In order to make the text of this book available as quickly as possible, the text alone has been scanned in from the original, omitting the diagrams, maps and photographs. It may be possible to add these in a subsequent version. Also left for future versions are italics and the dots under the letters e, o, and s, as described in the note on orthography below. Yoruba specialists will easily be able to supply them, and non-Yoruba specialists will not be particularly worried by their omission.]
Preface
These latter variables are central to the final chapter which deals with social stratification. Discussions of stratification based on Marxist or Weberian categories and discussions of ethnic identity stemming from the work of Abner Cohen have been pursued largely in isolation from each other. This is a preliminary attempt at a synthesis which I hope to develop in future.
Many general surveys of this sort start off as by-products of Ph.D. dissertations: this one is no exception. My fieldwork was financed by a Hayter Studentship from the Department of Education and Science, and by a Smuts Studentship from the University of Cambridge. During the course of my fieldwork I was affiliated to the Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana, Legon, and to the Department of Sociology, University of Ibadan. My thanks are due to all these institutions, together with Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, for a period of study-leave during which much of the thesis was written and the present study planned.

43. Africaresource.com: Scholars - Mojubaolu Olufunke Okome
wura iyebiye, Ti a ko le f'owo ra first place from the manner in which indigenoussocial structures confer equality in social development to the peoples of the
http://www.africaresource.com/scholar/women2.htm
Scholars W.A.R
West Africa Review IJELE
Art eJournal of the African World JENDA
A Journal of Culture and African Women Studies African Philosphy
Journal on African Philosophy Art Gallery
Art works Bibliolist
Bibliographies Books
Publications Telecom
Calling service Poetry
Written word Voices
Narratives Data Resources eAfrica Database Health HIV/AIDS Conferences Upcoming conferences Fellowships Fellowship opportunities Search ARC Still can't find what you are looking for? Mojubaolu Olufunke Okome Established Scholars INTERNATIONAL, REGIONAL AND DOMESTIC PROTECTION OF NIGERIAN WOMEN AGAINST DISCRIMINATION: CONSTRAINTS AND POSSIBILITIES Mojubaolu Olufunke Okome Fordham University Originally written in 1985. Work in progress. Not to be quoted without author's written permission. (Under review for publication) Intro Inequality Structures Contemporary Discrimination Protections ... Bibliography Introduction Discrimination against women is defined by Article 1 of the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women The focus of this paper is on the constraints and possibilities that shape the environment of Nigerian women and either enable them to surmount the problems arising from discrimination or limit their ability to do so. The central thesis is that discrimination against women in particular societies takes different forms, and thus requires the utilization of differential strategies in different historical epochs and societies. Discrimination against women will then continue to be a problem until all the factors responsible for its existence, maintenance and institutionalization are understood and eradicated.

44. HUMAN RIGHTS REPORTS FOR 2000: NIGERIA
in Lagos State with the Oodua peoples Congress (OPC groups for the throne of the Owoin Ondo and about 10 percent practice traditional indigenous religion or no
http://www.humanrights-usa.net/reports/nigeria.html
Department of State Human Rights Reports for 2000
Released by the U.S. Department of State in February 2001 Africa East Asia and the Pacific Europe and the New Independent States
Latin America, the Caribbean, and Canada
... Home NIGERIA RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From: a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing On May 5, a member of Lagos deputy governor's security detail allegedly killed a young woman when she obstructed the security detail as it was trying to clear traffic for a motorcade. Reports vary as to whether she was in a car or was a pedestrian. The security officer was charged with murder by a magistrate court. At year's end, the case had not been transferred to a court with jurisdiction over murder cases and a trial date had not been set. Police and military personnel used excessive and sometimes deadly force in the suppression of civil unrest, property vandalization, and interethnic violence, primarily in the oil and gas regions of Lagos, Kaduna and Abia states. Confrontations between increasingly militant "youths" (who tend to be unemployed males between the ages of 16 and 40), oil companies, and government authorities continued during the year. Reportedly 28 Delta youths were killed in such conflicts over protests or suspected vandalization near oil flow stations.

45. Virtual Library Document
of modernism which is affecting all peoples around the most populous city in continentalAfrica after Cairo the myth of displacement of indigenous culture by
http://ceris.metropolis.net/virtual library/other/adeyanju1.html
Transnational Social Fields of the Yoruba in Toront o A thesis presented to the Faculty of Graduate Studies of the University of Guelph in partial fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts, February, 2000 Charles T. Adeyanju
Faculty of Graduate Studies
University of Guelph Abstract Until very recently, the word "immigrant" had evoked images of people who had come to stay, having been transplanted from their original home in order to make for themselves a new home to which they would pay allegiance. This thesis questions the assumptions that minorities and migrants demonstrate an exclusive loyalty to one nation-state. This is examined by exploring the mode of social connections and frequency by which one of the most salient African ethnic communities in Toronto, the Yoruba (the pedigrees of Oduduwa from the Federal Republic of Nigeria), maintain ties on various levels with their "home community" in this period of globalization. Yoruba migration is linked to their enmeshment in global capitalism, beginning with colonialism which extracted natural resources for the development of the European industrialism, and later neocolonialism which caused the pervasive penetration of global capital in the form of loans, and the collusion of internal social forces with the Western transnational corporations, leading to the pauperization of the mass of the Nigerian population. It is argued that the crass material exploitation of Nigeria, both in the colonial and postcolonial periods is not enough to explain the Yoruba migration and their transnational practices but should be viewed in conjunction with the "dependency complex" caused by the colonial and neocolonial domination of their "psyche".

46. How Video Films Developed In Nigeria
which tell viewers about different countries and peoples. Before a handful of indigenousfilm makers in he ventured into video films, producing owo Idan (Magic
http://www.wacc.org.uk/publications/md/md1998-1/owns_ibie.html

Media Development
archive
Subscription form

Advocacy and Studies
... issue 1 1998
In Nigeria the prohibitive cost of producing films and other economic considerations have led producers to resort to video films. This boom has caused a general drop in quality and fuelled intense competition to promote their commercial appeal. In spite of the powers conferred on it by statute, the censors' body appears unable to stem the tide of this commercialism in a way which might effectively promote the country's rich cultural heritage.
How video films developed in Nigeria
Nosa Owens-Ibie
Changes in human society reflect the dynamism of culture. This dynamism is responsible for constant shifts in patterns associated with given cultures, and the multicultural character of most, if not all, societies substantially widens the scope for influence on such cultures.
Definitions of culture are wide in scope. Arulogun, (1979: 31) citing Ekpo Eyo, settled for a vast, partly human, material and spiritual apparatus 'by which societies are organised into permanent and recognisable groups.'
Over the years, the medium of film has come to be closely associated with the culture industry. In Nigeria, such a role for the film industry is still evolving although certain factors are altering the profile of what could be regarded as the country's culture, while the film industry itself is undergoing a crucial transition.

47. CHURCH OF THE ATONEMENT
17 The Arabicspeaking peoples in Chad are hard to Only about 15 Christians of localindigenous groups are for Philip Asso, serving the Lord in owo, Ondo whose
http://civic.bev.net/st-thomas/acf_apr2001.htm

48. PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN AFRICA : A BIBLIOGRAPHY.
PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN africa A BIBLIOGRAPHY. MILLER T. MAGGS Originally compiled by Dr Tim Maggs and staff of the Natal Museum, Private Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South africa.
http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/age/material/metbib.htm
PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN AFRICA : A BIBLIOGRAPHY. Originally compiled by Dr Tim Maggs and staff of the Natal Museum, Private Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South Africa. Maintained and updated by Dr Duncan Miller, Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7700, South Africa. This version dated: 30 May 1998 June 1, 1998. The archaeology of Africa - food, metals and towns :750-833. London: Routledge) which contains numerous references not listed below. If you find this bibliography useful please cite it as a reference in publication as: Pre-colonial metalworking in Africa, especially southern Africa: a bibliography :1-67. Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town (African Studies Library). ABUKAKAR, N. 1992. Metallurgy in northern Nigeria: Zamfara metal industry in the 19th century. In Thomas-Emeagwali, G. ed Science and technology in African history with case studies from Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe, and Zambia :55-78. Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press. ACKERMAN, D. 1983. Marale van groot argeologiese belang.

49. AllAfrica.com: Home
Republishes current news stories and topical features from african newspapers and agencies. Maintains Category Regional africa News and Media...... Nigeria's and South africa's open backing for President Robert Mugabe could plungeZimbabwe deeper into crisis and, in the long run, spark violent opposition
http://allafrica.com/
Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo-Brazzaville Congo-Kinshasa Côte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Rwanda Sao Tomé and Principé Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Western Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe
PanAfrica
: Iraq War Adds to Gloom for Africa at World Bank/IMF Meetings Central Africa : Great Lakes: Leaders Pledge to Adhere to Peace Pacts ... View list.
NIGERIA ELECTIONS
INEC Names Six 'Trouble-Spot' States
The Independent National Electoral Commission has identified six states as potential trouble spots in elections beginning this weekend.
Obasanjo Interviewed on Elections, Delta
President Obasanjo took a break from campaigning to talk to a group of reporters about the readiness of the country and the electoral commission for elections and about the crisis in the Niger Delta.
Ofeibea Quist-Arcton Campaign poster for Sarah Jibril of the Progressive Action Congress - the only woman presidential candidate in the race.

50. Disease In Clash - Apolyton Civilization Site Forums
One is called Plagues and peoples, the other one is they surely had some to the indigenousones.
http://www.apolyton.net/forums/Forum21/HTML/000018.html

Apolyton Civilization Site Forums

Clash of Civilizations

Disease in Clash profile register preferences faq ... bottom of page Author Topic: Disease in Clash
Clash of Civilizations
Project Lead
Canton, MI, USA
b.02-15-99 posted May 03, 1999 21:55 Another archived post from old BB carried over.
kingnurgle: Remember, diseases have had massive effects across all continents... they fluctuate via a lon-linear fation.. peaking in massive deaths, then lying dormant for years, then simply claiming a select few.. It will be improbable to realisticly recreate a single disease.. let alone multiple non-related plauges..
ME: I agree with you that a good way to handle diseases would be difficult to do well. However, the alternative is to not have the effects of disease in there at all. As in most of Clash, if the "flavor" can be gotten more-or-less correct on a feature representing the real world I will consider it a success. I feel strongly that we cannot let the perfect be the enemy of the good, or we will never even get the first beta version out.
K: That wasn't my point... You really have a choice.. either you do a "forced" type of black plauge thing.. or you go for a more realistic but less historically accurate.. That was my real point..

51. NWFP-Digest-L
Online journal focusing on issues of note in the world of Non-Wood Forest Products.Easy to subscribe/unsubscribe . Over 950 subscribers worldwide. 2002.
http://www.fao.org/forestry/FOP/FOPW/NWFP/Digest/digest-e.stm

52. NWFP-Digest-L
NWFP, Electronic NWFP Digest. This online journal is focusing onissues of note in the world of Non-Wood Forest Products. Currently
http://www.fao.org/forestry/FOP/FOPW/NWFP/new/Digest/digest-e.htm
NWFP Electronic NWFP Digest This on-line journal is focusing on issues of note in the world of Non-Wood Forest Products. Currently, over 950 people have subscribed the NWFP-Digest-L worldwide. Please click here to subscribe unsubscribe
  • NWFP-Digest-L No. 01/03 25 January 2003
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  • NWFP-Digest-L No. 10/01 26 September 2001
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