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         Akuapem Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

1. African Studies Center, Tuesday Bulletin - April 25, 2000 Spring # 15 (MSU)-
The akuapem South District of Ghana expressed the need for May 2425, 2000 in Edinburghon africa's indigenous People 'First peoples' or 'Marginalized
http://www.isp.msu.edu/AfricanStudies/TUESDAY/TBS15-00.htm
April 25, 2000 Spring # 15 Url: http://isp.msu.edu/AfricanStudies/ E-mail: africa@msu.edu Please submit information on Africa-related events or news seven to 10 days in advance of the day it should appear in the Tuesday Bulletin. Submissions may be brought, faxed, or e-mailed to the African Studies Center, Room 100, Center for International Programs, Michigan State University. Telephone: (517) 353-1700, Fax: (517) 432-1209.
EVENTS
No Events listed at this time. MSU ANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer 2000 Intensive Swahili Language Program will be held from June 19 to July 21, 2000 This five-week Intensive Summer Program in Swahili will be preceded by a three-day gratis seminar on East Africa. The three-day workshop on East African culture for students, faculty, and members of the public with a special interest in East Africa will be offered June 15-17, 2000. Lecturers will be drawn from across the nation and from MSU faculty who have taught, worked, and conducted research in East African countries. A limited number of FLAS fellowships are still available to Intermediate and Advanced Swahili students. Application forms for the FLAS fellowships are available from the Center.

2. African Studies Center, Tuesday Bulletin - April 25, 2000 Spring # 15 (MSU)-
in the cosmological ideas and social values of african peoples Dogon of French West africa, the magical cults of the are neither kings nor indigenous chiefs, and holders of what
http://www.isp.msu.edu/africanstudies/TUESDAY/TBS15-00.htm
April 25, 2000 Spring # 15 Url: http://isp.msu.edu/AfricanStudies/ E-mail: africa@msu.edu Please submit information on Africa-related events or news seven to 10 days in advance of the day it should appear in the Tuesday Bulletin. Submissions may be brought, faxed, or e-mailed to the African Studies Center, Room 100, Center for International Programs, Michigan State University. Telephone: (517) 353-1700, Fax: (517) 432-1209.
EVENTS
No Events listed at this time. MSU ANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer 2000 Intensive Swahili Language Program will be held from June 19 to July 21, 2000 This five-week Intensive Summer Program in Swahili will be preceded by a three-day gratis seminar on East Africa. The three-day workshop on East African culture for students, faculty, and members of the public with a special interest in East Africa will be offered June 15-17, 2000. Lecturers will be drawn from across the nation and from MSU faculty who have taught, worked, and conducted research in East African countries. A limited number of FLAS fellowships are still available to Intermediate and Advanced Swahili students. Application forms for the FLAS fellowships are available from the Center.

3. MSU Tuesday Bulletin, 04/25/00
the Akanspeaking peoples who settled in africa Online. His nation rapidly became more powerful by forming alliances with neighboring peoples, war for africa's Gold Coast / Robert
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Newsletters/tues-042500.html
MSU Tuesday Bulletin, 04/25/00
THE TUESDAY BULLETIN
Issue No. 15, Spring 2000
April 25, 2000
Weekly News from the AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY 100 INTERNATIONAL CENTER
EAST LANSING MI 48824-1035
BULLETIN CONTENTS MSU ANNOUNCEMENTS
OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS
CONFERENCES
FELLOWSHIPS No Events at this time MSU ANNOUNCEMENTS This five-week Intensive Summer Program in Swahili will be preceded by a three-day gratis seminar on East Africa. The three-day workshop on East African culture for students, faculty, and members of the public with a special interest in East Africawill be offered June 15-17, 2000. Lecturers will be drawn from across the nation and from MSU faculty who have taught, worked, and conducted research in East African countries. A limited number of FLAS fellowships are still available to Intermediate and Advanced Swahili students. Application forms for the FLAS fellowships are available from the Center. For further information, contact Dr. Yacob Fisseha, Assistant Director, African Studies Center, 100 Center for International Programs, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1035; Phone:(517) 353-1700; Fax: (517) 432-1209; or E-mail: fissehay@msu.edu. Advancing International Studies and Programs Professor Anne Ferguson (Anthropology and Director of the Women and International Development Program) received the Ralph H. Smucker Award for Advancing International Studies and Programs at MSU during the 10th annual ISP awards ceremony.

4. Report On The Implementation Of The Plan Of
in cooperation with those groups (women, indigenous peoples, children, migrants HUMANRIGHTS, AS OF DECEMBER 1998 africa Adja Afrikaans akuapem Twi Amharic
http://www.unhchr.ch/huridocda/huridoca.nsf/(Symbol)/E.CN.4.1999.87.En?OpenDocum

5. March 2002 Newsletter
tradipraticiens”, the traditional healers of indigenous peoples. the United States,Western Europe, Russia, and africa. Visit to Sister City akuapem in Ghana
http://www.msu.edu/unit/iih/IIHNEWSLETTER/Mar02/Mar02News.html
INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL HEALTH
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY IIH Newsletter
Volume 16, No. 2
March 20, 2002

IIH CONSTITUENT COLLEGES and UNITS: Human Ecology; (CHE); Human Medicine (CHM); Osteopathic Medicine (COM); Social Sciences (CSS); Veterinary Medicine (CVM); International Studies and Programs (ISP).
CONTENTS PAGE Announcements
IIH Projects

IIH Activities

From the IIH Constituent Colleges
...
Notes of Interest

ANNOUNCEMENTS IIH’s 15th Anniversary Year On December 31, 2001, the Institute of International Health (IIH) completed 15 years of service to Michigan State University (MSU), the State of Michigan, and its friends, colleagues, and institutions around the world. Beginning in January 1987, the Institute has played pivotal roles in facilitating faculty and student involvement in international health and establishing MSU’s reputation as a leader in health in all its dimensions on a global basis. From a beginning of no externally funded programs, the IIH has begun its sixteenth year with a portfolio of five fully funded major international health programs, a core faculty of over 200 academics and 18 adjunct professors (from both MSU and overseas institutions), a large constituency of alumni health professionals and health-professions students in many countries and at MSU, and trainees who have participated in training and research activities in international health under the IIH’s programs. During the early 1980s, the idea of establishing an Institute of International Health at MSU was floated on campus, spurred by the growing perception of global interdependence in health issues, the exemplary success of MSU’s Institute of International Agriculture, and the administration’s expressed vision for MSU as a major player in international studies. Following fact-finding trips to Africa in 1984, Deans Myron Magen (College of Osteopathic Medicine) and Ralph Smuckler (International Studies and Programs) initiated discussions on launching at MSU an IIH closely associated with the medical colleges of the university. Shortly thereafter, an extensive collaboration began and a linkage agreement was signed between MSU’s Department of Physiology (Chair, Dr. Harvey V. Sparks) and the University of Zimbabwe’s is Faculty of Medicine (Dean, Dr. Evangelos A. Petropoulos).

6. REFOCUS
in Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South africa and Turkey to workers, people of colourand indigenous peoples who will to 500 homes in the akuapem North District
http://www.re-focus.net/301002.htm
NEWS ARCHIVE 30 OCTOBER 2002
Refocus Weekly is distributed free every week to subscribers around the world, to keep you informed of trends as the various RE technologies transition into mainstream energy applications. With input from the Refocus editorial team, the content is compiled by Bill Eggertson of the Canadian Association for Renewable Energies, former editor of 'TRENDS in RE' and other energy news services.
Renewable energies reduce GHG growth in developing countries

Renewables could provide all of Australia's reductions under Kyoto

Tourists are not upset by windfarms, says British survey

Britain needs to do more to encourage renewable energies, says Minister
...
News-in-Brief

Receive the latest headlines by email every week for free. Click here to register.
Renewable energies reduce GHG growth in developing countries WASHINGTON, DC, US, 2002-10-30 [Refocus Weekly] The increased use of renewable energy in developing countries is contributing to significant reductions of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a new report from the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. Efforts in Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South Africa and Turkey to strengthen their economies and to enhance energy security also reduced annual growth of GHG emissions by 300 megatonnes, says 'Climate Change Mitigation in Developing Countries.' Without these efforts, emissions would be 19% higher than they are today.

7. Ngls.tad.ch/english/pubs/gb/gb70.txt
Contact Felicia Ekejiuba, Chief, africa Section, UNIFEM II, chief from Aburiakuapem(Ghana). NGOs, social movements and indigenous peoples' organizations from
http://ngls.tad.ch/english/pubs/gb/gb70.txt
, web site (www.unhchr.ch) or Miloon Kothari, International NGO Committee on Human Rights in Trade and Investment, 8 rue Gustave-Moynier, CH-1202 Geneva, Switzerland, telephone and fax +41-22/738 8167, e-mail , or Sharyle Patton, Commonweal, Box 316, Bolinas CA 94924, United States, telephone +1-415/868 0970, fax +1-415/868 2230, e-mail , web site or Eirah Gorre-Dale, Information and Public Affairs Office, WMO, 41 Giuseppe-Motta, CH-1211 Geneva 2, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/730 8315, fax +41-22/733 2829, e-mail . In the body of the message, type the text: SUBSCRIBE UNDP-future (do not type anything after UNDP-future). You will then receive a welcome letter to the list. For those without e-mail access, write to: Hans d'Orville, UNDP, Room 2092, 1 UN Plaza, New York NY 10017, United States, fax +1-212/906-5023, e-mail ; or Hamish Jenkins, Programme Officer, NGLS, Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland, telephone +41-22/917 2078, fax +41-22/917 0049, e-mail , or send an e-mail to with the following command (leave the subject line blank) in the body of your message: subscribe unifem-currents

8. KAFAN3.pdf
african peoples and culture. It explores the customs, religions, rituals, language, family structures and tribes of the african continent. Coast, Zanzibar, West africa, Belgian Congo, Tanganyika, Central africa, man in africa ! " Sex among primitive african peoples LABOUR OFFICE. indigenous peoples. Living And Working
http://www.kennyscollections.com/Africa/KAFAN3.pdf

9. Egypt Was Geographically Africa
of these ancient kings is the akuapem Dynasty that We in africa even know the indigenousafrican tribal the conquering Romans Asiatic peoples the bloodlines
http://www.stewartsynopsis.com/ancient_egypt_was_geographically.htm
Home Feedback Form New Caucasian Race Synopsis #1 ... Published Books The Africans Who Wrote The Bible: Ancient Secrets Africa and Christianity Have Never Told By: Alex Darkwah Visit Mr. Darkwah's new website at: http://www.africansbible.com Along with Cheikh Anta Diop, Alex Darkwah also traces Ancient Egypt to geographical Africa. Darkwah has DNA on his side; whereas, Diop used archeological artifacts, culture, and documentary text but was still challenged with his findings which were labeled "untrue" by the scientific world. Darkwah proves that Africans wrote the Bible even though your personal Bible may have pages laced with White Greek characters and distributed throughout the world. I thought that the following excerpts were extremely interesting. A website visitor suggested that I read the Darkwah's book. Thanks O. Tucker. Thanks to the website reader who suggested that I limit my research to Sub-Saharan Africa. You’ve started a greater quest to delve deeper into Europe's concealment of our history and to shed more light on how the global world exists in its current state. LAND OF THE BLACKSLAND OF THE BIBLE : Ancient Egypt was known indigenously as Kemet (Land of the Blacks). Ancient Egyptians have pinpointed their own ancestral origins to the Mount Rwenzori range in the east African cradle, otherwise known as the Mountains of the Moon. Some accounts state that Egyptian civilization came out of Ethiopia, which as a term was used to designate the land south of Egypt (the Upper Nile Valley), or was alternatively used to refer to the entire African continent. Chronologically therefore Egypt’s southern neighbor Nubia, which had its own distinct civilization, was her Nile Valley predecessor.

10. CSWR 2002-03 Fellows
and money indicate a wide gulf between indigenous and immigrant draw on archival materialconcerning early akuapem history in the life of the peoples of Central
http://www.hds.harvard.edu/cswr/fellowships/Fellows02-03/0203felslong.htm

fellowships:

CSWR Fellows 2002-2003 senior and fortieth anniversary fellowships dissertation fellowships undergraduate thesis fellowships summer grants ... former fellows
Search CSWR:
Senior Fellows MONNI ADAMS Philip Arnold Alanna Cooper recently completed her doctorate at Boston University in anthropology. Her project, “Silencing the Periphery to Write a History of Jewish Peoplehood: The Jews Of Bukhara, Yemen, Georgia and Kurdistan Talk Back,” offers a new paradigm for describing the historical relationship between Jewish centers. Using a multidisciplinary approach combining anthropology, history, and Jewish studies, Dr. Cooper will examine a set of archived letters written in the second half of the nineteenth century between the Palestine chief rabbi ( hakham bashi ) and rabbinic leaders in the diaspora communities of Bukhara, Yemen, Georgia, and Kurdistan. This analysis will challenge widely held assumptions about the authority of religious centers (such as Palestine) to shape the practice of Jewish law in communities considered peripheral. Dr. Cooper will tell the story of how these communities’ religious leaders struggled to retain their local authority in the face of efforts on the part of the hakham bashi to extend his sphere of influence into these regions. Furthermore, she offers an explanation of how and why these stories have been overlooked in the historical record, in order to deepen our understanding of the Jewish diaspora experience in particular. More broadly, she hopes to offer a framework for analysis that can be applied to the study of other diaspora groups. Dr. Cooper will be at the Center for the full academic year.

11. Indigenous Health Knowledge Dissemination And The Role
knowledge and techniques and if peoples are motivated for Research into Plant Medicine,akuapemMampong 6 . for dissemination of updated indigenous health care
http://www.icml.org/monday/amed/yeboah.htm

12. VADA - Volkeren Peoples Tribes A
akuapem (Ghana)/a . akuapem Information AMAKOSA AMAXOSA (Zuidelijk Afrika - SouthernAfrica). Amakosa (Ama-Xosa) Araweté See also indigenous peoples in Brazil.
http://www.vada.nl/volkenaa.htm

13. Report Of The Secretary-General On
the Special Rapporteur on Prisons and Conditions of Detention in africa, appointedby 9 (Rev.1), The Rights of indigenous peoples, in French and Spanish; No.
http://www.unhchr.ch/Huridocda/Huridoca.nsf/TestFrame/cb6c19fc2593384f802566f900

14. Annex 1: General Bibliography
The Languages of the Akan peoples . der valenzgebundenen Ergänzungen des Verbs im(akuapem)Twi . K. (ed.), 1998, Perspectives on indigenous Communication in
http://www.akan.org/akan_cd/ALIAKAN/course/U-references-p11.html
Akan Teleteaching Course
Annex 1: General bibliography
0. General, classification Bendor-Samuel, John T. (ed.), 1989. The Niger-Congo Languages . New York: Academic Press. Christaller, Johann Gottlieb, 1892. Die Sprachen Afrikas. Christaller page Dolphyne, Florence Abena, 1986. "The Languages of the Akan Peoples". Research Review . New Series vol. 2/1. 1-22. The Languages of Ghana . pp. 50-90; Akan: pp. 50-76. Greenberg, Joseph H., 1966. The Languages of Africa . Den Haag: Mouton. Grimes, Barbara F. (ed.), 1996. Ethnologue. Languages of the World vol. 1-3 (incl. Language Name Index and Language Family Index). Ethnologue on-line Kropp Dakubu, Mary Esther (ed.), 1988. The Languages of Ghana . New York: Kegan Paul. Stewart, John M., 1971. "Niger-Congo, Kwa". In: Thomas A. Sebeok (ed.) Current Trends in Linguistics . Vol. 7: Linguistics in Sub-Saharan Africa. Stewart, John M., 1976. "Towards Volta-Congo Reconstruction" (= Presentation at the Rijksuniversiteit in Leiden, 8.10.1976). Leiden: Universitaire Pers.

15. AIO Keywords List
see Suffering and misfortune Afghanistan africa african influence Aksum kingdom seeAxum kingdom akuapem see Akwapim Use collectively for the peoples of the
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/anthind/keywords.html
A B C D ... Y
Abagusii see Gusii Kenya
Aban see Shor
Abandoned settlements
Abashevo culture
Abbasids see also Islamic empire
Abduction
Abelam
Abenaki North American Indians (Algonquian) Northeast
Abetalipoproteinaemia
Abidjan
Ability
Abkhazia
Abnormalities
ABO blood-group system
Abolitionists
Abominable snowman see Yeti
Aboriginal studies
Abortion
Abrasion
Absahrokee language see Crow language
Absaraka language see Crow language
Absaroka language see Crow language
Absaroke language see Crow language
Absolutism see Despotism
Abu Hureyra site
Abusir site
Abydos site
Academic controversies see also Scientific controversies
Academic freedom
Academic publishing see Scholarly publishing
Academic status
Academic writing
Academics
Acadians (Louisiana) see Cajuns
Accents and accentuation
Accidents see also Traffic accidents
Acclimatisation
Accra
Accreditation
Acculturation see also Assimilation
Acetylcholine receptors
Achaemenid dynasty (559-330 BC)
Achaemenid empire
Ache see Guayaki
Acheulian culture
Achik see Garo
Achinese language
Achuar
Achumawi
Acidification
Acquiescence
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome see AIDS
Acronyms
Action theory
Acupuncture
Adam and Eve
Adamawa emirate
Adapidae see also Notharctus
Adaptation
Adat
Adena culture
Adhesives
Adipocere
Adisaiva see Adisaivar
Adisaivar
Adivasi
Adjectives
Adjustment (psychology)
Administration see also Government, Management, etc.

16. Fortune N-S
Chaga childhood; a description of indigenous education in an East A phonology of AkanAkuapem, Asante, Fante. The Khoisan peoples of South africa; Bushmen and
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/africana/fortune3.htm
Alphabetical Listing of Fortune Bibliography
Select the first letter of the author (or title, where no author is listed): (N) (O) (P) (Q) ... (S)
- N -
National Arts Foundation of Rhodesia. Arts Rhodesia. (Salisbury, Rhodesia: National Arts Foundation of Rhodesia, 1978). Title from cover. National Arts Foundation of Zimbabwe. Arts Zimbabwe. Salisbury, Zimbabwe: National Arts Foundation of Zimbabwe, 1982-. National Museums of Rhodesia. Occasional papers of the National Museums of Rhodesia Series A Human sciences. (Salisbury): National Museums of Rhodesia, 1971. National Museum and Art Gallery (Botswana) and Botswana Society. Botswana notes and records. Gaborone: s.n., n.d. Navess, B. T. A wutomi gi nene. Cleveland, Transvaal: Central Mission Press, 1956. Ncube, N. M. Ukungazi kufana lokufa. (Gwelo): Mambo Press, (1973). Ndangariro dzokunamata. Gwelo: Mambo press, 1966. Ndebele, J. P. Akusimlandu wami. Gwelo: Mambo Press, 1974. Ndebo mbuya yobuhe gwe ndzimu. London: British and Foreign Bible Society, 1942. Ndhlukula, N. P. IsiNdebele esiphezulu. Gwelo: Mambo Press, 1974. On cover: A manual of the Ndebele language.

17. Abstracts Of Papers Presented At The 1999 SEM Annual Meeting
threat to indigenous music in akuapem than either Therefore, I argue that indigenousexplanations of For these displaced peoples Korean music establishes
http://www.indiana.edu/~ethmusic/programs/abstracts_99.html
Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 44th Annual Meeting
of the Society for Ethnomusicology
Austin, Texas
November 18-21, 1999 [Abstracts are shown exactly as printed.Web editor] SEM home page

18. Untitled
Chwee, Twi), Based on the akuapem Dialect with But our indigenous proverbs also frequentlyencapsulate abstract the original worldviews of its peoples and the
http://pages.britishlibrary.net/soact/asantedom/archive/afcultcrisis.html
AFRICAN CULTURAL HERITAGE AND CONTEMPORARY CHANGE
PERSON AND COMMUNITY TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION : The Ghanaian Tradition of Philosophy by Kwasi Wiredu 1 PROLOGUE: Crisis in African Cultures by W. Emmanuel Abraham PART I AFRICAN IDENTITY 1. Sources of African Identity by W. Emmanuel Abraham 2. Problems in Africa's Self-Definition in the Contemporary World by Kwasi Wiredu PART II KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING 3. Knowledge and Truth: Ewe and Akan Conceptions by N.K. Dzobo 4. African Symbols and Proverbs as Sources of Knowledge and Truth by N.K. Dzobo Part III ANTHROPOLOGY AND METAPHYSICS 5. Person and Community in Akan Thought by Kwame Gyekye 6. The Image of Man in Africa by N.K. Dzobo 7. Death and the Afterlife in African Culture by Kwasi Wiredu 8. Immortality and the Nature of Man in Gra Thought by Joyce Engmann Part IV ETHICS AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY 9. Moral Foundations of an African Culture by Kwasi Wiredu 10. Towards Moral Development in Contemporary Africa: Insights from Dangme Traditional Moral Experience by J.N. Kudadjie

19. Ghana Country Profile
MoshiDagomba group of Volta peoples or to for use in educational institutions akuapem-Twi,Asante Roman Catholics, Protestants, and indigenous African sects
http://www.phcgroup.com/ime/ghana.html
ABOUT GHANA ABOUT GHANA - INDEX Location Land and Resources Climate Plants and Animals ... Political Instability and Subsequent Stability
Location
Land and Resources
Ghana is a lowland country, except for a range of hills on the eastern border. The sandy coastline is backed by a coastal plain that is crossed by several rivers and streams, generally navigable only by canoe. In the west the terrain is broken by heavily forested hills and many streams and rivers. To the north lies an undulating savanna country that is drained by the Black and White Volta rivers, which join to form the Volta, which then flows south to the sea through a narrow gap in the hills. Lake Volta, in the east, is one of the largest artificial lakes in the world; it was formed by the Akosombo Dam on the Volta River. No natural harbours exist. Ghana's highest point, in the eastern hills, is about 900 m (about 2950 ft) above sea level.
Climate
Plants and Animals
Much of the natural vegetation of Ghana has been destroyed by land clearing for agriculture, but such trees as the giant silk cotton, African mahogany, and cedar are still prevalent in the tropical forest zone of the south. The northern two-thirds of the country is covered by savanna-a grassland with scattered trees. Animal life has also been depleted, especially in the south, but it remains relatively diverse and includes leopard, hyena, buffalo, elephant, wildhog, antelope, and monkey. Many species of reptiles are found, including the cobra, python, puff adder, and horned adder.

20. AIO Keywords List
Aksum kingdom see Axum kingdom akuapem see Akwapim Ashluslay Asia Asian AmericansAsian peoples Asians Asiatic Bafia Baga Bagam West africa (Guinea) Baganda
http://aio.anthropology.org.uk/aio/keywords.html
Abagusii see Gusii Kenya
Aban see Shor
Abandoned settlements
Abashevo culture
Abbasids see also Islamic empire
Abduction
Abelam
Abenaki North American Indians (Algonquian) Northeast
Abetalipoproteinaemia
Abidjan
Ability
Abkhazia
Abnormalities
ABO blood-group system
Abolitionists
Abominable snowman see Yeti
Aboriginal studies
Abortion
Abrasion
Absahrokee language see Crow language
Absaraka language see Crow language
Absaroka language see Crow language
Absaroke language see Crow language
Absolutism see Despotism
Abu Hureyra site
Abusir site
Abydos site
Academic controversies see also Scientific controversies
Academic freedom
Academic publishing see Scholarly publishing
Academic status
Academic writing
Academics
Acadians (Louisiana) see Cajuns
Accents and accentuation
Accidents see also Traffic accidents
Acclimatisation
Accra
Accreditation
Acculturation see also Assimilation
Acetylcholine receptors
Achaemenid dynasty (559-330 BC)
Achaemenid empire
Ache see Guayaki:
Acheulian culture
Achik see Garo
Achinese language
Achuar
Achumawi
Acidification
Acquiescence
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome see AIDS
Acronyms
Action theory
Acupuncture
Adam and Eve
Adamawa emirate
Adapidae see also Notharctus
Adaptation
Adat
Adena culture
Adhesives
Adipocere
Adisaiva see Adisaivar
Adisaivar
Adivasi
Adjectives
Adjustment (psychology)
Administration see also Government, Management, etc.

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