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81. Brief On Nigeria
Main indigenous Language Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba. Far Eastern extremes of the country (Jos, mambila, Obudu With a population of over 100 million people, Nigeria is
http://www.nigerianitexpert.com/nigeria_history.html

82. SIL Bibliography: Cameroon
The role of language committees in developing the indigenous languages of Rheme and focus in mambila. . People of the drum of God, Come! Calling the Christians
http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country_bibl.asp?name=Cameroon

83. SIL Bibliography: Discourse Analysis
in the confrontation between the prophet and people of Yahweh Who’s who in mambila folk stories Discourse grammar Studies in indigenous languages of Colombia
http://www.ethnologue.com/show_subject.asp?code=DAN

84. Social Images - Bibliography & Filmography
Colin M. (1973 1972) The Mountain People. in contemporary ethnographic and indigenous media , Visual in anthropological research the mambila Nggwun ritual .
http://www.isca.ox.ac.uk/vismeth/biblio.html
Bibliography click here for the Filmography Abu-Lughod, Lila (1995) 'The objects of soap opera: Egyptian television and the cultural politics of modernity', in D. Miller (ed.), Worlds Apart: Modernity Through the Prism of the Local. London: Routledge. pp. 190-210. Ames, Michael (1992) Cannibal Tours and Glass Boxes: the Anthropology of Museums. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. Appignanesi, Richard and Oscar Zarate (1979) Freud for Beginners. London: Writers and Readers Publishing Cooperative. Asch, Patsy and Linda Connor (1994) 'Opportunities for "double-voicing" in ethnographic film', Visual Anthropology Review, 10 (2): 14-27. Aufderheide, Patricia (1995) 'The Video in the Villages project: videomaking with and by Brazilian Indians', Visual Anthropology Review, 11 (2): 83-93. Babb, Lawrence A. (1981) 'Glancing: visual interaction in Hinduism', Journal of Anthropological Research, 37 (4): 387-401. Banks, Marcus (1988a) 'Forty-minute fieldwork', JASO (Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford), 19 (3): 251-63.

85. Profile - Nigeria
the Alantika Mountains, and the mambila Mountains and villages, others occupy several larger indigenous cities Many people of nonHausa origin, including the city
http://www.inadev.org/profile_-_nigeria.htm
I INTRODUCTION
Nigeria , republic in western Africa, bounded by Cameroon to the east, Chad to the northeast, Niger to the north, Benin to the west, and the Atlantic Ocean to the south. Until 1991, the capital was the largest city, Lagos, on the southwestern coast; at that time, the new city of Abuja, in the country’s interior, became capital. Nigeria has a federal form of government and is divided into 36 states and a federal capital territory. The country's official name is the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
II LAND AND RESOURCES
Nigeria covers an area of 923,768 sq km (356,669 sq mi). At its widest, it measures about 1,200 km (about 750 mi) from east to west and about 1,050 km (about 650 mi) from north to south. The country’s topography ranges from lowlands along the coast and in the lower Niger Valley to high plateaus in the north and mountains along the eastern border. Much of the country is laced with productive rivers. The Nigerian ecology varies from tropical forest in the south to dry savanna in the far north, yielding a diverse mix of plant and animal life. Human population and development pose serious threats to both the ecological and the human environment. A Topographic Regions
The broad, mostly level valleys of the Niger and Benue rivers form Nigeria’s largest physical region. The Niger enters the country from the northwest, the Benue from the northeast; they join at the city of Lokoja in the south central region and continue south, where they empty into the Atlantic at the Niger Delta. Together, they form the shape of a

86. Durham E-Prints - Power And Patronage In Pakistan
indigenous polo and the politics of regional language environment of the Hindkospeaking people. Problems of Interpretation mambila Figurines and Masquerades
http://eprints.dur.ac.uk/archive/00000020/
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Power and patronage in Pakistan
Lyon, Dr. Stephen M (2002) Power and patronage in Pakistan . Ph.D., AID Anthropology in Development, ANTHROPOLOGY, University of Durham. Full text available as:
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Abstract
communities. This thesis argues that these relationships must be examined as
manifestations of cultural continuity rather than as separate structures. The various
cultures of Pakistan display certain common cultural features which suggest a reexamination
of past analytical divisions of tribe and peasant societies. This thesis looks at
the ways power is expressed, accumulated and maintained in three social contexts:
kinship, caste and political relationships. These three social contexts are embedded
kin groups provides the building blocks for Pakistani asymmetrical relationships, which
may usefully be understood as a form of patronage. As these social building blocks are
transferred to non-kin contexts the patron/client aspects are more easily identi?ed and
studied; however, this thesis argues that the core relationship roles exist even in close

87. Cameroon/Cameroun Bibliography

http://www.geocities.com/markdelancey/CamerounBibliography.html
Subject Headings Agriculture and Pastoralism
Anthropology and Sociology

Archaeology

Archives
...
Urbanism

Agriculture and Pastoralism Alary, Véronique. "L'utilitarisme en question: les cacaoculteurs face aux risques," in Le désarroi camerounais: l'épreuve de l'économie-monde edited by Georges Courade, pp. 89-109. Paris: Karthala, 2000. Ayisi-Mbala, J.P. The Role of Goats in the Economic Development in Cameroon . Ph.D., Leeds (UK), 1981. Bol Alima, G. Studies on Double Cropping of Maize in Yaoundé, Cameroon . Ph.D., London (UK), 1978. Boutrais, Jean. "L'agro-élevage des Peuls de Ngaoundéré (Adamaoua camerounais)," in L'ethnicité peule dans des contextes nouveaux: la dynamique des frontières edited by Youssouf Diallo and Günther Schlee, pp. 161-89. Paris: Karthala, 2000. Domo, Joseph. "Transformation des représentations dans la pratique agricole au Nord-Cameroun." Annales de la Facult és des Arts, Lettres et Sciences Humaines de lùUniversité de Ngaoundéré (Ngaoundéré) 1 (1996): pp. 31-8. Grangeret-Owona, Isabelle. "La fertilité des terres bamiléké dans tous ses états," in

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