A R T T H R O B at the Cape Town Castle, kwere kwere moves into works made in collaboration with indigenous artists and from the South African landscape, symbols and people. http://www.artthrob.co.za/00may/listings.html
Extractions: by Sue Williamson International Waters comprises six interconnected works which address aspects of sea travel, the role that maritime space played in colonization and the subsequent maintenance of links between Britain and South Africa. The exhibition identifies the "open sea" as a space for exploration, emigration and exchange, and in so doing, acknowledges Seventeenth Century Dutch marine painting (the period of Dutch settlement in the Cape), J M W Turner's Nineteenth Century blurring of maritime space and Piet Mondrian's early Twentieth Century geometric evocation of the meeting between land and sea in his Pier and Ocean series. The year 2000 marks the centenary of the formation of the Union Castle Line which provided mail and passenger services between Southampton and Cape Town until 1977, and the show includes two works which make reference to this fleet. International Waters is an experimental exhibition which has been conceived at a distance specifically for the AVA. In addition to a wall-drawing, a sculpture using found objects and a single photograph, the exhibition presents various forms of language, using neon tubes, an electronic L.E.D. screen, and vinyl adhesive texts. A further exhibition similarly titled will be presented by Palmer at the John Hansard Gallery in Southampton next year, thus re-establishing links between two port cities which were once closely connected by sea trade. Catalogues of both exhibitions will be published late next year.
Wp898 the significance of participation and indigenous knowledge as Development has to start from people s own evaluation of to ask are you a kwere potter or http://www.valt.helsinki.fi/kmi/Julkais/WPt/1998/WP898.HTM
Extractions: ISSN 1238-898X THE CULTURAL PROCESS OF DEVELOPMENT: Some impressions of anthropologists working in development This argument is also found in workshops intending to promote a dialogue between anthropology, international politics and development Two examples will suffice here. A Seminar on Culture and Development in Southern Tanzania brought together researchers from Tanzania It is assumed that empirical research in a similar context must be connected to a participatory process. The task of the Council for Development and Assistance Studies established by the Uppsala University is to promote dialogue between academic researchers and professionals in the field of development cooperation. The chief aim of the Council is to be a bridge between academics and practitioners in order to tap knowledge and resources and in this way create a more efficient development cooperation. The Council operates by arranging seminars and workshops
ANC DAILY NEWS BRIEFING MONDAY 27 SEPTEMBER 1999 PLEASE NOTE This we come and the broad spectrum of indigenous knowledge in him and he was called a kwerekwere (a swear run out for the thousands of homeless people who were http://www.anc.org.za/anc/newsbrief/1999/news0927
NATIONS OF THE OLD WORLD ************** * EUROPE Kuria Kutu Kw adza Kwavi Kwaya kwere Lambya Langi Luo 62%) Chinese (15%) see CHINA indigenous (6%) Cambodia Chinese see CHINA China, People s Republic of http://landru.i-link-2.net/jtrees/text/Nations_of_old-world.txt
Extractions: Tofin Toli Urhobo //Waama// (Yoabu) Waci Xweda Xwela Yoba //Yoruba// [Anago and Nago] [current count: 51] Botswana Batswana (95%) Kalanga Basarwa Kgalagadi Burkina Faso Mossi Gurunsi Senufo Lobi Bobo Mande Fulani Burundi - Hutu (Bantu) Tutsi (Hamitic) Twa (Pygmy) Cameroon Cameroon Highlanders Equatorial Bantu Kirdi //Fulani// Northwestern Bantu Eastern Nigritic Cape Verde Creole (Cape Verde mulatto) (71%) [mixed African] (28%) Central African Republic [over 80 ethnic groups] Maubere Chinese [see CHINA] India - [Est. population: 1,014,003,817 ] Indo-Aryan (72%) (northern India) [speakers of Sanskrit (classical) ] [speakers of Pali, Prakrit, and *Apabhramsha] [speakers of Assamese] [speakers of Bengali] [speakers of Gujarati] [speakers of Hindi] [speakers of Kashmiri] [speakers of Konkani] [speakers of Marathi] [speakers of Nepali] [speakers of Oriya] [speakers of Punjabi] [speakers of Rajasthani] [speakers of Sindhi] Dravidian (southern India) (25%) [speakers of Tamil] Tamil Nadu [speakers of Telugu] Andhra Pradesh [speakers of Kannada (Canarese)] Karnataka [speakers of Malayam] Kerala Indonesia - Malay Chinese [see CHINA] [Borneo] [Irian Jaya (West Papua) ]
East Africa Living Encyclopedia Supported by a Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities) Kenya Tanzania Uganda Burundi Rwanda. Tanzania Ethnic Groups. More than 120 ethnic groups are represented in Tanzania. as http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/NEH/tethnic.htm
The Constitution Of Kenya Review Commission The Review Process. The Constitution Past, Present and Amendments. Civic Education on the Constitution. Issues and Questions for Public Hearings. Verbatim Reports of Public Hearings. Discussion Papers of The Commission. Public Lectures http://www.kenyaconstitution.org/docs/06ad083.htm