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         Ganda Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

41. GLOSSARY
their slaves and to resettle free blacks in africa. Public Information (CPI) US propa­gandaagency of including whole villages of indigenous peoples, to court
http://www.hfac.uh.edu/gl/glossary.htm
GLOSSARY Adams, John As the nation's second president, Adams had to deal with deteriorating relations be­tween the United States and France. Conflicts be­tween the two countries were evident in the XYZ Affair and the "Quasi‑War" of 1798 to 1800. Alien and Sedition Acts Four acts passed in 1798 de­signed to curb criticism of the federal government. Adopted during a period of conflict with France, the acts lengthened the period before an immigrant could obtain citizenship, gave the president power to deport dangerous aliens, and provided for the prosecution of those who wrote "false, scandalous and malicious" writings against the U.S. govern­ment. Allies American Exceptionalism Notion that America houses biologically superior people and can spread democracy to the rest of the world. An intellectual foundation of expansion and racism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. American Federation of Labor A confederation of la­bor unions founded in 1886, it was composed mainly of skilled craft unions and was the first na­tional labor organization to survive and experience a degree of success, largely because of its conserva­tive leadership that accepted industrial capitalism. American System (of Henry Clay) Henry Clay's pro­gram for the national economy, which included a protective tariff to stimulate industry, a national bank to provide credit, and federally funded inter­nal improvements to expand the market for farm products.

42. Sukuma/African Bibliography
The indigenous political systemof the Sukuma and Cultural Institutions of the SukumaPeoples of Shinyanga africa as illustrated by the ganda with reference to
http://www.stolaf.edu/people/mbele/bibliography.htm
A BIBLIOGRAPHY ON SUKUMA AND NYAMWEZI CULTURE AND SOCIETY Joseph L. Mbele
St. Olaf College I have been compiling this bibliography in the course of research on the folklore of the Sukuma and Nyamwezi of Tanzania, which I began in 1993. This was part of my research on Tanzania's Epic Folklore, which was funded by Earthwatch, an affiliate of the Center for Field Research, based in Massachussetts. The Sukuma and Nyamwezi, who are often assumed to be essentially the same people, are among the most well-studied of Tanzania's ethnic groups. For over a hundred years, there has been a continuous stream of books, articles, manuscripts, theses and dissertations on this group in various languages, but notably in Swahili, English, German, French and Sukuma. These writings cover the history, culture, economic and social life of these people. My focus in this bibliography is on folklore and culture in general. I have therefore included works on subjects such as language. Some of the works I have included in this bilbiography may not strike other people as belonging in it. The Sukuma and Nyamwezi may safely be considered close enough to be discussed together, but I have included entries on neighbouring groups such as the Kara and the Kerewe, who live on islands in Lake Victoria. I think they have enough in common with the Sukuma to warrant their inclusion in this bibliography. Such choices are difficult for anybody trying to create a bibliography of this nature. There are materials I have not included in this bibliography, for example sections in various books, most of which I probaby do not even know about. There are also typescripts and manuscripts which I have not even heard about. It is more than likely that such materials exist, in such places as the White Fathers' Archives in Rome, Oxford House in England, and perhaps in Canada as well, since the priests who set up the Sukuma Museum at Bujora, near Mwanza, came from Canada. Though this is a rather comprehensive bibliography for the period it covers, I know that some more work needs to be done to make it even better.

43. Science/Social_Sciences/Anthropology/Cultural_Anthropology/Ethnography
ukc.ac.uk/EthnoAtlas/Hmar/Cult_dir/Culture.7840 ganda A ethnography Ifugao Ethnographicsummary of a group of indigenous mountain peoples of northern
http://www.science-and-research.com/Science/Social_Sciences/Anthropology/Cultura
Search: Category Description:
Ethnography is the anthropological description of contemporary societies and subcultures. Science Anthropology Ethnography Okavango Delta Peoples of Botswana
The Okavango Delta Peoples: their history and culture and the challenges they face due to rapid economic development and social change.
URL: http://www.mindspring.com/~johnbock/
Silicon Valley Cultures Project

The Silicon Valley Cultures Project is a ten year anthropological study of the identities and cultures of the people living and working in the Silicon Valley region.
URL: http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/anthropology/svcp/
Pacific Encounters

Ethnographic descriptions and photography of village life in Western Samoa.
URL: http://merriewood.com/pacific/
Social Organisation Economy Development
A doctoral student's ethnographic research in a Pakistani village with weekly updates from the field. URL: http://sapir.ukc.ac.uk/SLyon/ Martijn de Koning Research Pages A PhD student presents his ongoing research on young Muslims and their religious identity in the Netherlands. URL: http://www.martijndekoning.com/

44. Bibliogr The World Of Music 1977-1999 (articles)
All articles in the journal World of Music from 1977 to 2002.Category Arts Music Musicology Ethnomusicology Journals...... Listening to Instrumental Music in africa South of the The Music and Poetry of a GandaHistorical Song The Musical Traditions of the indigenous peoples of Chile
http://www.uni-bamberg.de/~ba2fm3/bibl_wom1977ff.htm

45. DePauw University
Traditional Andean Folk Songs indigenous Sound of the Pan Pipes Music An Introductionto the Music of the World's peoples. Kecak ganda Sari Bali, Indonesia
http://www.depauw.edu/library/musiclib/worldmusicguide.htm
DePauw University Music Library A Guide To Locating Sound Recordings* of World Music Traditions** Compiled by Richard M. Dowell Africa Caribbean Central America, South America and Mexico East Asia and Central Asia ... Recent Acquisitions *The following list only includes sound recordings available at DePauw University’s Music Library. If you have library privileges at DePauw University, you may check out any of the recordings by asking for it by call number (last line of each entry) at the Music Library’s circulation desk. **Each section is divided into the following sub-sections: 1) Recordings that include musical examples that represent multiple countries, regions, cultures or styles ; 2) Recordings devoted to individual countries, regions, cultures or styles
AFRICA
Multiple Countries, Regions, Cultures or Styles
Africa: Music of the Malinké and Baoulé Los Angeles: Counterpoint/Esoteric Records, [195-?]. LP Record 1350 African Drums Rwanda, French Equatorial Africa, Nigeria, Belgian Congo, South Africa, Madagascar New York: Folkways Records, 1954.

46. Jean-Philippe Platteau - Ethnic Cleavages And Grassroots Behavior
land improvement scheme proved successful, the indigenous farmers reacted by the solidarityof the Bantu peoples of the for most purposes than ganda, Soga, Kiga
http://www.dse.de/ef/instn/platteau.htm
Villa Borsig Workshop Series 2000 - The Institutional Foundations of a Market Economy - Jean-Philippe Platteau

Ethnic Cleavages and Grassroots Behavior
Jean-Philippe Platteau
Social scientists’ depictions of rural communities suggest that personalized relationships sealed by various forms of reciprocal exchange contribute to people’s wellbeing by allowing them to solve important problems effectively. Economists do not escape this rule. They consider that such personalized networks of relationships have the potential advantages of supplying informal insurance to their members and overcoming the trust problem inherent in all difficult and costly to enforce exchanges. Recent but growing concern about the negative consequences of ethnic feelings have mitigated this positive view, however. This paper explores the role of the community in generating or relaying ethnic feelings. The recent ethnic genocide and cleansing in Rwanda and Yugoslavia seem to indicate that political manipulation orchestrated at the highest levels is the main force sparking ethnic hatred and killings. Yet unless we are prepared to see ordinary people as automata mechanically responsive to the messages sent by their elites, we have to ask why these people chose to obey messages of racial hatred and to perpetrate violence. In Rwanda the question is why the same people who spent an inordinate amount of time and energy disobeying directives from above in ordinary day-to-day matters chose to follow the instructions or incitements to ethnic violence broadcast by their elites (Uvin, 1998, pp. 206–7). This paper highlights the grassroots logic that can reinforce and propagate ethnic hatred triggered by the upper echelons of the political sphere using two concepts borrowed from social choice theory—weak and strict monotonicity.

47. Introduction
promoting Christianity and encouraging other indigenous antiNyabingi produced Kigamen who replaced ganda Agents as Kiga and other African peoples of their
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~terisatu/Counterplanning/c2.htm
Introduction: Rastafari, old and new
"Anyone who knows anything of history knows that great social changes are impossible without the feminine ferment."
Karl Marx
"Having survived fifty years of social and religious intolerance, discrimination and harassment, the Rastafari movement is poised between becoming a part of world history, contributing to a universal culture, and being a passing phenomenon of the 20th
century [Campbell 1987:234]."
The perspective here is that the place of Rastafari in a universal culture, a new society, depends not only on it becoming more informed by class analysis, as Campbell contends, but also on the nurturing of the feminist ferment which here is called 'the new Rastafari.' Original Rastafari is uncompromising in its commitment to 'chant down Babylon,' the capitalist system. However, it is bound by the 'capitalist male deal.' Sexism is the key defining feature distinguishing the old rasta from the new. And it is also a fetter limiting the old rasta to a black nationalist accommodation with capitalism. In contrast, the defining feature of new Rastafari is the affirmation that class consciousness cannot exist without gender consciousness.
This study considers gender and class relations in Caribbean and East African popular struggles during three crises of capitalism in the 20th century. It argues that with the growing internationalization of the world market, capital has sought to develop through establishing class alignments characterized by specific gender relations. Using the concept of the 'male deal' to examine gender dynamics during each crisis, the study concludes that the 'new Rastafari' is part of an international social movement of resistance to structural adjustment and affirmation of a new society which transcends the limitations of the male deal.

48. CIA - The World Factbook 2002 -- Uganda
33%, Protestant 33%, Muslim 16%, indigenous beliefs 18 and some radio broadcasts),ganda or Luganda Military branches Ugandan peoples' Defense Force (including
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/print/ug.html
Country List World Factbook Home The World Factbook 2002 Uganda Introduction Uganda Background: Uganda achieved independence from the UK in 1962. The dictatorial regime of Idi AMIN (1971-79) was responsible for the deaths of some 300,000 opponents; guerrilla war and human rights abuses under Milton OBOTE (1980-85) claimed another 100,000 lives. During the 1990s the government promulgated non-party presidential and legislative elections. Geography Uganda Location: Eastern Africa, west of Kenya Geographic coordinates: 1 00 N, 32 00 E Map references: Africa Area: total: 236,040 sq km
water: 36,330 sq km
land: 199,710 sq km Area - comparative: slightly smaller than Oregon Land boundaries: total: 2,698 km
border countries: Democratic Republic of the Congo 765 km, Kenya 933 km, Rwanda 169 km, Sudan 435 km, Tanzania 396 km Coastline: km (landlocked) Maritime claims: none (landlocked) Climate: tropical; generally rainy with two dry seasons (December to February, June to August); semiarid in northeast Terrain: mostly plateau with rim of mountains Elevation extremes: lowest point: Lake Albert 621 m
highest point: Margherita Peak on Mount Stanley 5,110 m

49. Untitled
The indigenous political systemof the Sukuma and proposals Cultural Institutionsof the Sukuma peoples of Shinyanga as illustrated by the ganda with reference
http://www.sjobo.nu/gorang/bibl.htm
EXTENDED BIBLIOGRAPHY ON PASTORAL COMMUNITIES IN AFRICA UGANDA/KARAMOJA
  • Abrahams, R. G. "Reaching an Agreement over Bridewealth in Labwor, Northern Uganda: A Case Study." In Councils in Action, edited by A. Richards and A. Kuper, 202-15. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1971.
  • Abrahams, R. G. "Spirit, Twins and Ashes in Labwor." In The Interpretation of Ritual: Essays in Honour of A. I. Richards, edited by J. LaFontaine, 115-34. London: Tavistock, 1972.
  • Abrahams, R. G. "Aspects of Labwor Age and Generation Grouping and Related Systems." In Age, Generation and Time: Some Features of East African Age Organizations, edited by P. T. W. Baxter and U. Almagor, 37-67. London: C. Hurst and Co., 1978.
  • Abrahams, R. G. "Dual Organization in Labwor?" Ethnos 51 (1986): 88-104.
  • Alnwick, D. J. "The 1980 Famine in Karamoja." In Crisis in Uganda: The Breakdown of Health Services, edited by C. P. Dodge and P. D. Weibe, 127-44. New York: Pergamon Press, 1985.
  • Baker, Randall. "Development and the Pastoral Peoples of Karamoja, North-East Uganda: An Example of the Treatment of Symptoms." In Pastoralism in Tropical Africa, edited by T. Monod, 187-205. London: Oxford University Press, 1975.
  • 50. A Continent At War, And In Discourse Published In Searching For
    into being as a truly indigenous initiative,' notes was launched by Mali's northernpeoples against what an antibanditry armed movement - ganda Koy (Masters
    http://www.euconflict.org/dev/ECCP/ECCPSurveys_v0_10.nsf/wvSearchResults/09D7518

    51. African Proverbs, Sayings And Stories - Book Reviews
    when properly adapted and applied in indigenous societies, will a better appreciationof the ganda, Uganda and approach to the world’s least reached peoples.
    http://www.afriprov.org/resources/bkreview.htm
    Book Reviews
    Contents
  • Book Review of What African Myths Tell
  • Catfish and Toad
  • Book Review of ... African Proverbs on Peace and War
  • Book Review of What African Myths Tell
    Printed by Peramiho: Peramiho Printing Press, 2/2OO2.
    12 pages
    Reviewed by John P. Mbonde
    How was it at the beginning?
    Father John Henschel C.S.Sp. of Bagamoyo Parish, Tanzania is the author of this booklet. Undoubtedly his inspiration derives from the fact that he [from Germany] has lived for years at a famous historical place, Bagamoyo, where the first Catholic missionaries set foot in Tanzania mainland to proclaim the Gospel. On the other side Bagamoyo is a famous slave trading centre and also the place where the remains of Dr David Livingstone were kept for some time before being sent abroad fore burial. "Since time immemorial men found answers in a unique style, in the style of narrated stories, narrated in myths…A myth is a story told in a special way which originates in prehistorical time…The myths elucidate that even the first men, millenniums and millenniums ago, were able to see not only the nature around them. They had the ability to understand what is behind the foreground, to understand profound realities. As the last profound reality they recognized God" (p. 9).
    In everyday life, each one of us has three main important questions: WHAT—WHENWHY. Myths are basically memories of the past. Africa tells thousands of such old myths. This book, "What African Myths Tell" with its subtitle "How was it at the beginning?" discusses seven myths selected from six different African ethnic groups (nations) who live thousands of kilometres away from one another, but tell the same myths.
  • 52. EnterUganda Discussion Board
    of interpersonal interactions between their peoples and not Bari 60,000, Chiga 1,391,442,ganda 3,015,980, Gujarati of a patriotic indigenous background or an
    http://www.enteruganda.com/bulletinboard/detail.php?bulletinId=13&categoryId=9

    53. Bibliography Of The Mentawai Islands
    indigenous peoples of the World Mentawai. affluence to poverty the 'development'of tribal or isolated peoples . Diglosia dan lingua franca ganda di Mentawai
    http://www.mentawai.org/bibliog.htm
    HOME PAGE: THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF THE MENTAWAI ISLANDS
    BIBLIOGRAPHIC RESOURCES FOR THE MENTAWAI ISLANDS List of Documentary Sources
    This is a basic list of articles and books, both published works and unpublished manuscripts having the Mentawai islands as their focus, or engaging with them in some capacity. It should be noted that many of these sources can be classified as "popular" literature insofar as they are not written from any identifiable disciplinary outlook in the humanities or social sciences. Much of their content, therefore, is based upon impressions gained by their respective authors in the course of visits of short duration often resulting in superficial "snapshots" of aspects of the societies and cultures at various locations across the islands. This needs to be kept in mind when consulting any of these sources. An exception to this is perhaps the accounts of the early missionaries and colonial officials whose accounts stem from interactions with various local populations that are both qualitative and often extend over long periods of time; these accounts, therefore, contain much useful and interesting information. There also exists a good range of sources dealing with primates. However, these are not included here at this stage (December 2002). The items appearing in this list cover most of the published sources up until the early 1990s, nevertheless it is certain that some unpublished documents have been overlooked. I should also note that many such items have come into existence during the 1990s and are not listed here. Hence this list should be regarded as provisional and merely a place to start a detailed literary exploration of the islands.

    54. Bibliography On African Traditional Religion
    Scriptures of African peoples The Sacred Rituals and medicines indigenous healingin Lugira AM, Redemption in ganda Traditional Belief, in Cahiers des
    http://www.afrikaworld.net/afrel/atr_bibliography.htm
    Updated: 17 October, 2002 Abbink J., "Ritual and Environment: The Mósit ceremony of the Ethiopian Me'en people," Journal of Religion in Africa
    , "Reading the entrails: analysis of an African divination discourse", Man Abimbola W., "The Place of African Traditional Religion in Contemporary Africa: The Yoruba Example" in Olupona, ed. Kingship, Religion and Rituals in a Nigerian community: a phenomenological study of Ondo Yoruba festivals . Stockholm,1991, 51-58. Abrahamsson H., The Origin of Death, Studies in African Mythology, Studia Ethnographica Upsaliensia III, Uppsala, 1951. Acheampong S.O., "Reconstructing the structure of Akan traditional religion," Mission Ackah C. A., Akan Ethics. A Study of the Moral Ideasand the Moral Behaviour of the Akan Tribes of Ghana, Accra, 1988. Achebe Chinua, "Chi in Igbo Cosmology", in In Morning Yet on creation day, N.Y., 1975. Achebe Chinwe, The World of the Ogbanje, Enugu, 1986. Adagala K., "Mother Nature, Patriarchal Cosmology & Gender" in Gilbert E.M., ed. Nairobi: Masaki Publishers.1992, 47-65.

    55. UGANDA
    The indigenous inhabitants of what is now Uganda ranged from trade relations previouslyexisting among the peoples of the at the court of the ganda kabaka (king
    http://www.lourdes-bernadette.org/STBERN1/UGANDAL.htm
    UGANDA yoo-gahn'-dah or oo-gahn'-dah Uganda, a small landlocked state located on the equator in East Africa, is bordered by Sudan to the north, Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire) to the west, Rwanda and Tanzania to the south, and Kenya to the east. Uganda's borders and the basis of its economic system were created (1893-1926) as British rule supplanted older and much smaller political units, which remained a focus for cultural, economic, and political competition. LAND AND RESOURCES Uganda occupies part of a high plateau that averages 915 m (3,000 ft) in the less hilly and lower north and rises to 1,340 m (4,400 ft) near Kampala. On the southwestern border near the equator are the volcanic Virunga Mountains and the permanently snowcapped peaks of the Ruwenzori Range, including Mount Stanley (5,110 m/16,763 ft), Uganda's highest point. These mountains form part of the western branch of the East African Rift System. On the eastern border are several extinct volcanoes, including Mount Elgon. Lakes cover almost one-fifth of Uganda's area. Rivers in the south drain into Lake Victoria, the third largest lake in the world, from which the Victoria Nile flows into Lake Albert. Most of Uganda has relatively reliable rainfall in two distinct wet seasons (March-May and October-November). The semiarid northeast receives 625 to 1,000 mm (25 to 39 in) of rainfall between April and August, while annual rainfall near Lake Victoria averages 1,500 mm (59 in). Temperatures, which are moderated by altitude, reach 35¡ C (95¡ F) on the Rift floor near Lake George and along the Sudanese border. In the southwestern highlands they drop to 5¡ C (40¡ F).

    56. Uganda Facts
    Location Definition Field Listing Eastern africa, west of 33%, Protestant 33%, Muslim16%, indigenous beliefs 18%. and some radio broadcasts), ganda or Luganda
    http://www.kabarolebornagain.org/uganda.htm
    Uganda Facts
    "The Lord grants the desires of the righteous" Legend
    Definition Field Listing Introduction Uganda Background:
    Uganda achieved independence from the UK in 1962. The dictatorial regime of Idi AMIN (1971-79) was responsible for the deaths of some 300,000 opponents; guerrilla war and human rights abuses under Milton OBOTE (1980-85) claimed another 100,000 lives. During the 1990s the government promulgated non-party presidential and legislative elections. Geography Uganda Top of Page Location:
    Eastern Africa, west of Kenya Geographic coordinates:
    1 00 N, 32 00 E Map references:
    Africa Area:
    total: 236,040 sq km
    water: 36,330 sq km
    land: 199,710 sq km Area - comparative:
    slightly smaller than Oregon Land boundaries:
    total: 2,698 km border countries: Democratic Republic of the Congo 765 km, Kenya 933 km, Rwanda 169 km, Sudan 435 km, Tanzania 396 km Coastline: km (landlocked) Maritime claims: none (landlocked) Climate: tropical; generally rainy with two dry seasons (December to February, June to August); semiarid in northeast

    57. PUBLICATIONS
    indigenous knowledge and development monitor; UNASYLVA; Forest, trees and peoplenewsletter; as a Traditional Institutional Arrangements in Modern ganda Society.
    http://www.indiana.edu/~ifri/crc/uganda/publications/publications.htm
    UFRIC Library resources
    IFRI Publications

    Downloadable publications

    Full text articles:
    ... Remote
    LIBRARY RESOURCES
    • UFRIC Library
        Indigenous knowledge and institutions : an up-to-date and comprehensive bibliography with over 1000 citations covering the entire globe! Tragedy of the commons bibliography with 266 citations that include theoretical and policy dimensions. IASCP , The International Association of Common Property resources collections of conference papers provide useful references on indigenous knowledge, forestry and common property issues.
      Other Libraries and databases Journals and newsletters TOP
      IFRI PUBLICATIONS A number of publications based on UFRIC/IFRI research methodology has been documented.

    58. Eugene Hillman, CSSp - Good News For Every Nation - Via Inculturation
    nations Maasai, Kikuyu, Nandi, Tem, ganda, Luba, Karimojong A nation is an indigenoushuman group regarding ethnically and/or culturally, as peoples apart from
    http://www.sedos.org/english/Hillman_2.htm
    * Eugene Hillman, CSSp
    Good News for Every Nation - Via Inculturation
    The nations ( gentes ) to whom the Christian community is divinely sent, and supposed to become incarnate through faithfulness to the missionary principle of inculturation, are not the world’s politically constructed nation-states as such. They are, rather, the multitude of indigenous ethno-cultural nations, sometimes sill called "tribes," enclosed within the boundaries of politically constructed nation-states. This view of missionary activity has far reaching social, cultural, ethical, theological and ecclesial implications. Introduction This paper offers some reflections on the political and religious dimensions of humankind’s historical existence as a multitude of distinctive ethno-cultural groups of people. The particular focus is upon those living in Africa south of the Sahara. Their total population is about five hundred million, currently threatened massively by an HIV/AIDS pandemic; also by countless struggles for power, wealth and mere survival, not to mention neo-colonial controls and constraints. Under colonialism these peoples were categorized politically as "tribes." In the terms of 19 th century Social Darwinism they were taught in schools and churches, at least implicitly, to see themselves as backward peoples, or even as aggregates of competing individuals, marching slowly along a road called "progress." Their modernizing "development"-consisting largely in the pursuit of wealth and power by

    59. MetaCrawler Results | Search Query = Buganda
    is the most widely spoken indigenous language in terenie obecnej Ugandy przez ludGanda (Baganda), nalezacy People Buganda's history and peoples through the
    http://search.metacrawler.com/texis/search?q=Buganda

    60. AMU CHMA NEWSLETTER #10 (05/25/1993)
    recent discoveries about indigenous African mathematics of the Tchokwe and neighbouringpeoples in Angola Guinee, Gabon), Yoruba (Nigeria), ganda, BaNgongo (Congo
    http://www.math.buffalo.edu/mad/AMU/amu_chma_10.html
    AMUCHMA-NEWSLETTER-10 Chairman: Paulus Gerdes (Mozambique) Secretary: Ahmed Djebbar (Algeria) TABLE OF CONTENTS NEWSLETTER #10 Objectives of AMUCHMA Meetings Current research interests Bibliography on Astronomy in Africa south of the Sahara ... back to AMUCHMA ONLINE 2. MEETINGS 2.1 First AMU Symposium on Mathematics Education in Africa for the 21st Century William Ebeid, Chairman of the AMU Commission on Mathematics Education, presented at the First AMU Symposium on Mathematics Education in Africa for the 21st Century (Cairo, Egypt, 5-10 September, 1992) a paper entitled "Research in Mathematics Education in Egypt". He gave an overview on the 240 theses (171 M.Ed. and 69 Ph.D.) in Mathematics Education defended at Egyptian universities in the period 1954-1990. 2.2 Seminar "Mathematics, Philosophy, and Education" Salimata Doumbia (Côte d'Ivoire) and Paulus Gerdes (Mozambique) conducted a workshop on 'Ethnomathematics / Mathematics in the African Cultural Environment' at the international seminar "Mathematics, Philosophy, and Education" (Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire, 25-29 January, 1993). In one of the plenary sessions of the same seminar, Gerdes presented a paper entitled 'Ethnomathematics as a new research area in Africa'. 2.3 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science

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