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         Kpelle Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

81. New Page 1
They are the kpelle, Bassa, Dei, Gbandi, Gio in Liberia, with especially the indigenousgroups demanding The peoples of Liberia, through the National Catholic
http://www.mil.za/CSANDF/CJSupp/TrainingFormation/ArmyCollege/ArmyCollege2000/li
INTERVENTION OPERATIONS IN AFRICA: LESSONS LEARNT FROM LIBERIA WITH REGARDS TO COMMAND, CONTROL AND LOGISTICS
INTRODUCTION
" A peaceful city, a legitimate government, a grateful populace - when the leaders of West Africa, horrified by the anarchy in Liberia, met in 1990 and took the big decision to create a regional peacekeeping force, this is exactly how they hoped it would end.. But they could never for one moment have thought it would take seven long years to the happy ending, nor imagined half the things which happened along the way. " In an apparent attempt to end this war, a group of West African nations under the auspices of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) took the extraordinary step of waging an intervention operation in Liberia in Aug 1990. The force, known as the ECOWAS Cease-fire Monitoring Group (ECOMOG), was the first regional peacekeeping force (RPKF) in the third world after the cold war. Economists had indicated that several African countries had entered the "

82. PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN AFRICA : A BIBLIOGRAPHY.
PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN africa A BIBLIOGRAPHY. MILLER T. MAGGS Originally compiled by Dr Tim Maggs and staff of the Natal Museum, Private Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South africa.
http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/age/material/metbib.htm
PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN AFRICA : A BIBLIOGRAPHY. Originally compiled by Dr Tim Maggs and staff of the Natal Museum, Private Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South Africa. Maintained and updated by Dr Duncan Miller, Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7700, South Africa. This version dated: 30 May 1998 June 1, 1998. The archaeology of Africa - food, metals and towns :750-833. London: Routledge) which contains numerous references not listed below. If you find this bibliography useful please cite it as a reference in publication as: Pre-colonial metalworking in Africa, especially southern Africa: a bibliography :1-67. Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town (African Studies Library). ABUKAKAR, N. 1992. Metallurgy in northern Nigeria: Zamfara metal industry in the 19th century. In Thomas-Emeagwali, G. ed Science and technology in African history with case studies from Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe, and Zambia :55-78. Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press. ACKERMAN, D. 1983. Marale van groot argeologiese belang.

83. PRECOLONIAL ME TALWORKING IN AFRICA A BIBLIOGRAPH Y .
PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN africa A BIBLIOGRAPHY. MILLER T. MAGGS Originally compiled by Dr Tim Maggs and staff of the Natal Museum, Private Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South africa.
http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/age/material/metbib.pdf

84. Anthropology 010 | Section 002 | UNC-CH | Fall 2001 | MWF 12PM
Anthropology 010 Section 002 UNCCH Fall 2001 MWF 12PM Peabody Hall Room 010 Course Instructor Chris Rodning, Ph.D. Candidate in Anthropology, UNC-CH Battle Hall Room 309
http://www.unc.edu/courses/2001fall/anth/010/002
GENERAL ANTHROPOLOGY
crodning@email.unc.edu
introduction schedule notes ... links class announcements...
  • Our final exam is scheduled for Wednesday, 12/12/01, at noon. The exam period lasts three hours. Students need to bring one blue book and they may bring one sheet of paper with handwritten notes to refer to while taking the exam. Interested in participating in an archaeological field school ? Professors in the UNC Research Laboratories of Archaeology will be conducting excavations at ancient native villages in the North Carolina Piedmont (Professor Steve Davis) and at Moche (Professor Brian Billman) settlements in the Peruvian Andes during the summer of 2002. Interested in participating in an ethnographic field school ? Professor Tim Wallace of the NCSU Department of Sociology and Anthropology will be continuing his study of the effects of tourism on rural communities in Costa Rica during the summer of 2002.
some upcoming campus events...
  • Visit the exhibit on traditional Cherokee pottery on display in the UNC Student Union through the end of December. This display was created by the UNC Research Laboratories of Archaeology and the Carolina Indian Circle.

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