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         Rendille Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

21. Land Resour Ce Management In Relation To Indigenous Peoples In Kenya
indigenous peoples in indigenous peoples in Kenya include the. Maasai, the Samburu, the Somali, the. Okiek, the Turkana, the Boran (or Borana) . the Gabbra, the Orma, the rendille,
http://www.itpcentre.org/KenyaIngles2.pdf

22. Why Hilario Chiriap Needs Money For His Work
of the United Nations Decade of indigenous peoples (1995 2004 The indigenous shamansand wisdom-keepers spent ten keeper of the endangered rendille nomads of
http://www.the-awakening.net/HilarioNeedsMoney.html
Why Hilario Chiriap needs money for his work Some more information about Don Hilario Chiriap en the Shuar-people from the Amazonas. The project began when Lama Denys Teundroup, the spiritual director of the European Buddhist Union was travelling in Ecuador to give some Buddhist teachings. It was there that the author and poet Alexis Naranjo invited him to join him on a trip into the jungle to visit the Shuar. This tribe (collectively known to outsiders as "Jivaros") inhabit the sacred waterfalls where the Andes plunge thousands of feet into the green depths of the Amazon rainforest. The Shuar are famous as the proud tribal people who, when gold-greedy Conquistadors built a town there in the sixteenth century, killed every last Spaniard in combat, except the Governor who expired after having been made to gulp a drink wich they prepared especially for him: a goble of the precious metal he craved so much, in liquid form! Hannah An interesting book about the Shuar (Jivaro) is from Michael Harner who lived two years with this people from '56 till en'58 and wrote a a anthopological study about them "The Jivaro, people of the sacred waterfalls." (Jivaro is the name that the Spanish conquistadores gave, but themselves they prefer the name Shuar). The Awakening

23. Indigenous Knowledge And Institutions
Resource Values on indigenous peoples Are Nonmarket Valuation Resource Values on indigenous peoples Are Nonmarket Valuation Water Management in East africa.". african Affairs
http://www.indiana.edu/~iascp/INDIG.html

24. Index01
indigenous peoples and Reform of the State in Latin An indigenous People's Strugglefor Forest and A rendille Dictionary, Including a Grammatical Outline and
http://www.anthropos-journal.de/index01/body_index01.htm
INDEX 2001 AUTHOR INDEX GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX Articles Africa ... Oceania AUTHOR INDEX Articles Amborn, Hermann: Soul and Personality As a Communal Bond 41 Antweiler, Christoph: Interkulturalität und Kosmopolitismus in Indonesien? Ethnische Grenzen und ethnieübergreifende Identität in Makassar 433 Bednarik, Robert G.: Beads and Pendants of the Pleistocene 545 Beek, W.E.A. van: cf. Bienfait, H.F. and W.E.A. van Beek Bienfait, H.F. and W.E.A. van Beek: Right and Left As Political Categories. An Exercise in "Not-So-Primitive" Classification 169 Bonatz, Dominik: Wandel einer Megalithkultur im 20. Jahrhundert (Nias/Indonesien) 105 Bossert, Federico, y Diego Villar: Tres dimensiones de la máscara ritual chané 59 Braakhuis, H.E.M.: The Way of All Flesh. Sexual Implications of the Mayan Hunt 391 Brumann, Christoph: Religious Consensus and Secular Dissent. Two Alternative Paths to Survival for Utopian Communes 87 Dalfovo, Albert Titus: Religion among the Lugbara. The Triadic Source of Its Meaning 29 Demmer, Ulrich: Always an Argument. Persuasive Tools in the Death Rituals of the Jenu Kurumba 475 Erckenbrecht, Corinna:

25. Untitled Document
his journey in India; South africa is his with the conservative strategies of theRendille and Gabra are the ones where today's indigenous peoples were confined
http://web.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v4/v4i3a3.htm
THE LAND OF JILALI : TRAVELS THROUGH KENYA'S DROUGHT-STRICKEN NORTH.
Paul Goldsmith This is the journal of the journeys of a Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) team studying natural resource management in Marsabit District. Our missionto assess environmental degradation, and how sedentarisation may be contributing to desertification around settlements and on the range. As we zoom across the flat hardpan of the Chalbi desert, the sun is spreading its soft, brilliant blanket over the silhouette of Mt. Kulal. We pass small Rendille camels from the fora satellite camps, grazing in the twilight, unfazed by our speed. We are in no hurry, and on a twilight break we inspect the Chalbi's crusty, salt-impregnated surface. When precipitation exceeds evaporation, insoluble minerals and salts are leached out of the soil. Eons of rainfall have concentrated soda in the wind-scoured floor of this former inland sea. Once upon a time, this was a very lush land. It is early June, 2000. Kenya is hurtling toward a massive combined crisis of power shortfalls, water rationing, and shrinking informal sector employment. The drought-crippled economy is fueling new and unique expressions of social tension: rioting school children in Nairobi capture a Tusker beer truck, and drink it dry.

26. Environmental Anthro--Faculty
(2000) Female Circumcision in africa Culture, Controversy and planning amng theRendille of northern Contested Arctic indigenous peoples, Nation States,
http://www.anthro.washington.edu/environ/EA_faculty.htm
Core Faculty Students in the EA program must have supervisory committees chaired by a member of the core faculty in EA. These faculty are all members of the graduate faculty in Anthropology, and include the following (listed in alphabetical order): Donald K. Grayson (PhD 1973, U of Oregon) email: grayson@u.washington.edu Research interests: Human paleoecology , environmental change, biogeography, western North America and western European Paleolithic. "My interests focus on the interrelationships between environmental change and human uses of those environments in the past. I am currently conducting research in both the Great Basin of the western United States and in France . In the Basin I am studying deep, stratified sequences of small mammals from Homestead Cave Utah , in order to address issues concerning both mammalian biogeographic history and the nature of Great Basin environments during the past 12,000 years. In France , I am analyzing a series of Middle and Upper Paleolithic faunas from cave sites in order to better understand relationships between climatic change and human foraging strategies through time." Selected Publications:
  • The Archaeological Record of Human Impacts on Animal Populations.

27. Biocultural Anthro - Faculty
members of the formerly nomadic rendille tribe. eds.) Female Circumcision in AfricaCulture, Change Contested Arctic indigenous peoples, Nation States,
http://www.anthro.washington.edu/biocult/BC_faculty.htm
Biocultural Faculty Gerald G. Eck (PhD 1977, UCal Berkeley) email: ggeck@u.washington.edu Research interests: Physical anthropology, paleontology, primatology, methodology; Africa. "Presently, I work in the Hadar Formation as a member of a team organized by the Institute of Human Origins, Arizona State University. As one of the project's senior paleontologists, I lead the general paleontological surface survey. The aims of this survey are to document in which sediments and geographical locations fossils occur and to recover those of scientific importance. My crew and I now work in sediments generally geologically younger than those explored during the 1970s. In the Department of Anthropology, I serve as Coordinator of the Biocultural Anthropology Program." Selected Publications:
  • Bobe, R. and G. G. Eck 2001 Patterns of abundance and diversity in Pliocene Bovidae from the Shungura Formation, lower Omo Valley, Ethiopia. Paleobiology
  • Kramer, P. A., and G. G. Eck 2000 Locomotor energetics and leg length in hominid bipedality.

28. Traditional Music & Cultures Of Kenya
thus be called Kenya's aboriginal or indigenous people (a of life, namely the Maasai,Turkana, rendille and some used and managed by entire peoples for their
http://bluegecko.crosswinds.net/kenya/contexts/kenyapeople.htm
click map to enter
The Traditional Music and Cultures of Kenya, a multimedia encyclopaedia dedicated to Kenya's people, has moved to a new and now permanent address: http://www.bluegecko.org/kenya/ A fully indexed site search engine, a clickable index, and an interactive map will enable to you to easily find what you're looking for. The site now has over five hundred pages, 235 images, seven hours of music, and not an advert in sight! Karibu - welcome. Click on the link or on the map to access the site's main page

29. Jilali
began his journey in India; South africa is his the conservative strategies of theRendille and Gabra the ones where today’s indigenous peoples were confined
http://www.elci.org/ecoforum/WasJiltxt.htm
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The East African Environment and Development Magazine THE LAND OF JILALI Travel through Kenya's drought-stricken north By Paul Goldsmith A s we zoom across the flat hardpan of the Chalbi desert, at the fastest speeds I have ever experienced in This is the journal of project three point one-five, the journeys of a Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) team studying natural resource management in Marsabit District. Our mission - to assess environmental degradation, and how sedentarisation may be contributing to desertification around settlements and on the range. It is early June, 2000. Kenya is hurtling towards a massive combined crisis of power shortfalls, water rationing, and shrinking informal sector employment. The drought-crippled economy is fueling new and unique expressions of social tension: rioting school children in Nairobi capture a Tusker truck, and drink it dry.

30. Anthropology News
groups,” including seniors, refugees and indigenous peoples. has been working amongRendille pastoralists in in Victoria—rather than africa—developing a
http://web.uvic.ca/socsci/social_circles/Fall_1998/anthropology_news.html
Anthropology
Research Activities
Dr. Stephenson and co-researcher, Dr. Lisa Mitchell received a $50,000 grant from the BC Medical Services Foundation. In partnership with the genetic counselling unit of Victoria General Hospital, Dr. Mitchell and Dr. Stephenson are investigating social and cultural aspects of parental experiences using ultrasound to detect foetal anomalies.This research is also being conducted under the aegis of the Centre for Environmental Health. Rebecca Wigen received a significant conference grant from the SSHRC which allowed the University of Victoria to host the International Congress of Zoological Archaeology late this summer. Several hundred participants at the Congress came from around the world. Participants had a chance to visit the departmental faunal laboratory. This laboratory and its activities have quietly claimed an important place in research in zoo-archaeology. Next page

31. SOAS Centre Of African Studies
uk Lecturer in Anthropology, SOAS indigenous medicine and in East africa; Maaspeakingpeoples (Samburu, Maasai Chamus, Dorobo) and the rendille; maturation and
http://www.soas.ac.uk/cas/membant.html

32. Going Places - Experts In Tours And Travel In Kenya And East
peoples of Kenya The four main human categories who today include the Somali, rendille,Borana and Early Visitors Beside the indigenous African Societies who
http://www.goingplaces.co.ke/sub/kenya.htm

33. References
and resilience in East African pastoralism The rendille and Ariaal In The Futureof nomadic peoples, ed. JJ Galaty The uses of indigenous technical knowledge
http://www.ifad.org/gender/thematic/livestock/live_ref.htm
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Abu, K. 1990. Socio-economic study of livestock keeping in the northern region. Draft report for ZOPP project planning workshop, Khartum. GTZ, Eschborn, Germany Abu Bodie, G.J. 1979. The role of Rendille women. IPAL Technical Report F-2, UNESCO/MAB. Adan, A.H. 1988. Adra, N. 1983. Ahmed, A.G.M. 1972. Essays in Sudan Ethnology, Ahmed, A.G.M. 1976. Some aspects of pastoral nomadism in the Sudan. Economic and Social Research Council, Khartoum. Al-Hassny, A. 1983. Allan, W. 1965. The African husbandman. Asad, T. 1970. The Kababish Arabs: Power, authority and consent in a nomadic tribe. New York: Praeger Publ.

34. Women's Role In Livestock Production
and Asia, such as the rendille of northern and sociopolitical conditions affectingpastoral peoples have contributed in Latin America and africa, has resulted
http://www.ifad.org/gender/thematic/livestock/live_2.htm
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32. Livestock production systems all over the world can be divided into four categories: transhumant, agropastoralist, intensive crops and livestock, and peri-urban intensive systems. In addition, there are a few not-so-obvious livestock systems. 36. The livestock production systems can be broadly divided into four categories of increasing responsibility based on gender and age:
  • no involvement by women; women responsible only for processing products; women responsible for managing and processing small stock and other animals kept at the homestead; and women responsible for managing and herding large stock and other animals, and for the processing of livestock produce.
A. Traditional Role of Women in Livestock Production Systems

35. Références
in East African pastoralism the rendille and the in dry lands past and present,indigenous and imposed of northern Kordofan, Sudan , Nomadic peoples 105860.
http://www.fao.org/docrep/T6260F/t6260f0p.htm
Table des matières Précédente Suivante Abu Sin, M. El-H. 1983. Livestock economy and attitude of tenants in Rahad and Khashm el-Girba projects: a comparative study , Rahad Agricultural corporation/ Ford Foundation, Univ. of Khartourn. Abu-Lughod, L. 1984. "Change and Egyptian bedouins", Cultural Survival Quarterly Adams, M. 1982. "The Baggara problem: attempts at modern change in southern Darfur and southern Kordofan (Sudan)", Development and change Adegboye, R.O. et al A socioeconomic study of Fulani nomads in Kwara State , Federal Livestock Department (Kaduna), Ibadan. Ahrned, A.G.M. n.d. "Nomadic competition in the Funj area", Sudan Notes and Records , Khartoum. Ahmed, A.G.M. et al. 1976. Jonglei soclo-economic research team interim report , Executive Organ Development projects in Jonglei area, Rep. of Sudan. Ahmed, A.G.M. 1978. Integrated rural development: problems and strategies. The case of the Dinka and the Nuer of the Jonglei project area in the Sudan , Executive Organ Development Projects in Jonglei area, report no.8, Rep. of Sudan. Pastoralism conference in Nigeria , Ahmadu Bello Univ., Zaria.

36. REFERENCES
in East African pastoralism the rendille and the in dry lands past and present,indigenous and imposed of northern Kordofan, Sudan”, Nomadic peoples 105860
http://www.fao.org/docrep/t6260e/t6260e09.htm
REFERENCES
Abu Sin, M. El-H. 1983. Livestock economy and attitude of tenants in Rahad and Khashm el-Girba projects: a comparative study, Rahad Agricultural Corporation/Ford Foundation, Univ. of Khartoum. Abu-Lughod, L. 1984. Cultural Survival Quarterly Journal d'Agriculture Traditionnel et de Botanique Applique (JATBA) Adams, M. 1982. Development and change. Adegboye, R.O. et al. A socio-economic study of Fulani nomads in Kwara State, Federal Livestock Department (Kaduna), Ibadan. Ahmed, A.G.M. n.d. Sudan Notes and Records, Khartoum. Ahmed, A.G.M. et al. Jonglei socio-economic research team interim report, Executive Organ Development projects in Jonglei area. Rep. of Sudan. Ahmed, A.G.M. 1978. Integrated rural development: problems and strategies. The case of the Dinka and the Nuer of the Jonglei project area in the Sudan, Executive Organ Development Projects in Jonglei area, report no. 8, Rep. of Sudan. Pastoralism conference in Nigeria, Ahmadu Bello Univ., Zaria. Allan, W. et al. Land holding and land usage among the plateau Tonga of Mazabuka District: a reconnaissance survey, 1945. Oxford Univ. Press, Cape Town.

37. FTP Newsletter 29
indigenous range management knowledge of pastoral peoples and the presents a casestudy of the indigenous range management of the rendille and the
http://www-trees.slu.se/newsl/29/29review.htm
Reviews
Papers - Books - Reports - Newsletters
Real-life economics - Understanding wealth creation Edited by Paul Ekins and Manfred Max-Neef From the end of the Second World War industrial economic activity has been sought and generated on an unparalleled scale. Ever greater output and productivity have been the dominant policy objectives of practically every country in the world for the past 50 years. The cost of this kind of development has been and is being paid in widespread social and cultural disruption and potentially catastrophic effects on the global environment.

38. SIL Bibliography: Notes On Literacy
1990. The rendille project. . Predictable books for preliterate peoples. . 1990. Excerpts from the manual for indigenous editors (translated from Spanish). .
http://www.ethnologue.com/show_serial.asp?name=Notes on Literacy

39. ASM Vol.18
Practices of Pastoral and Agricultural peoples in Kenya the maximizing strategy ofindigenous herders more The rendille further buffer themselves from market
http://www.africa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/kiroku/asm_normal/abstracts/ASM_18-3_4.html
Special Issue: Social Changes and Self-Reliant Practices of Pastoral and Agricultural Peoples in Kenya pp. 121-135 Shun SATO
Tsukuba University How the East African Pastoral Nomads, Especially the Rendille, Respond to the Encroaching Market Economy ABSTRACT
The maximizing strategy for livestock herding of the East African pastoral nomads has been accused as irrational and thereby destroying the ecological balance of rangeland. Carrying capacity and pastoral productivity promoted in state policies, however, are arbitrary concepts. This paper finds the maximizing strategy of indigenous herders more adaptive to the precarious and drought-ridden tropical arid zone, using the Rendille herding as the main example. The Rendille further buffer themselves from market economy through manipulation of the local dual economy and the symbiotic personal relationship with the local livestock dealers. Key Words: East African pastoralism; Maximizing strategy; Rational herding; Local dual economy; Social transactions and transfers of livestock. pp. 137-155

40. Mali Resource - Anne E. Moncure Elementary School
it was adopted by most of the peoples conquered and Roman script, although Arabicand an indigenous script have closest relatives are Boni and rendille in Kenya
http://hbogucki.staffnet.com/aemes/resource/mali/afroasia.htm
Afroasiatic Languages
Also known as Hamito-Semitic languages, Afroasiatic languages are spoken by 175 million persons representing a wide range of cultures through most of the Middle East, the Horn of Africa, North Africa, and large portions of West Africa. The languages include Arabic and Hebrew. Afroasiatic is commonly divided into five main branches based on ancient roots: Egyptian, Semitic, Cushitic, Berber, and Chad. Omotic, formerly called West Cushitic, has recently been suggested as constituting a sixth branch. These languages differ in their particulars, and the exact relationship among the branches has not yet been established. Scholars postulate, however, that all are derived from an unknown ancestor language that was probably spoken in northeast Africa or the Sahara about the 6th millennium BC. Egyptian.
Egyptian is the oldest attested language of the family and has the longest known continuous history. As a written language it proceeded in five distinct stages. The first threeOld Egyptian (c.3000 to c.2200 BC), Middle Egyptian (c.2200 to c.1200 BC), and Late or Neo-Egyptian (c.1300 to c.700 BC)were all written in Hieroglyphics. Demotic (c.700 BC to AD c.300) was written in a simplified cursive script based on hieroglyphics and spoken by early Christians. Coptic (from AD 300), written in an alphabet based on Greek and comprising many dialects, was still widely spoken in the 16th century and in some places possibly as late as the 19th century. One Coptic dialect, Bohairic, is now the liturgical language of the Christian Monophysite Coptic Church.

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