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         Swahili Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. African Voices, African Lives: Personal Narratives from a Swahili Village
  2. The World of the Swahili: An African Mercantile Civilization by Professor John Middleton, 1992-06-24
  3. Tradition and Politics: Indigenous Political Structures in Africa by Olufemi Vaughan, 2004-04
  4. Continuity and Autonomy in Swahili Communities: Inland Influences and Strategies of Self-Determination (Issues in Environmental Politics)

61. SABCnews Hope Through Action For Change: Youth Summit
as seen through youth and student organisations in Apartheid South africa. says,rather than as a platform to enhance visibility, indigenous peoples will not
http://www.sabcnews.com/south_africa/general/0,1009,19939,00.html
Fri, Apr 11 2003 Johannesburg 22:58 SEARCH ADVANCE SEARCH CATEGORIES SOUTH AFRICA Crime/Justice Education General ... FEATURES SABC WEBSITES SABC 1 SABC 2 SABC 3 Fokus ... Channel Africa Other Langs Chinyanja English French Portuguese Silozi Swahili FIND A BUSINESS Software Downloads In order to play audio and video clips you will require Real Player. Please note a free version is available at real.com RealPlayer
home
south africa ... Hope through action for change: Youth Summit August 27, 2001, 16:45 by Annicia Reddiar
In line with developing the positions of young people which will be finalised for submission to the World Conference Against Racism to begin later this week, representatives at the Youth Summit today addressed issues of contemporary manifestations of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.
The youth organisations' representatives highlighted the need for education to eliminate indifference, as well as the dangers of persistent forms of subtle racism. Despite descriptions of harsh realities facing Dalits (untouchables) due to the caste system and the magnitude of the marginalisation of indigenous people, the representatives also maintained that a youth vision has always been capable of transformation as seen through youth and student organisations in Apartheid South Africa.
Sithembile Kholwa, a Grade 11 pupil at Reasoma High School in Soweto, spoke of the difference between extreme cases of racism which are contemptible, but able to be addressed through the judicial system, and those forms of subtle racism which insinuates itself into daily life.

62. SABCnews Strength Of Language Concerns Minority Groups
home/south africa/general He said paragraph 27 of the draft declaration of the conferencewhich declared that the use of the term indigenous peoples cannot be
http://www.sabcnews.com/south_africa/general/0,1009,20465,00.html
Fri, Apr 11 2003 Johannesburg 22:58 SEARCH ADVANCE SEARCH CATEGORIES SOUTH AFRICA Crime/Justice Education General ... FEATURES SABC WEBSITES SABC 1 SABC 2 SABC 3 Fokus ... Channel Africa Other Langs Chinyanja English French Portuguese Silozi Swahili FIND A BUSINESS Software Downloads In order to play audio and video clips you will require Real Player. Please note a free version is available at real.com RealPlayer
home
south africa ... Strength of language concerns minority groups September 06, 2001, 16:45 Minority rights groups have expressed grave concern at the strength of the language used in the draft declaration and programme of action of the World Conference Against Racism in Durban. Mark Lattimer, director of the international Minority Rights Group, said certain paragraphs of the two documents of the conference, on which officials were currently working, would undermine the rights of minorities if accepted.
He said paragraph 27 of the draft declaration of the conference which declared that the use of the term indigenous peoples "cannot be construed as having any implications to rights" would undermine the rights of minorities if it was accepted. "In one stroke, that removes the legal force of all action in the document with regards to indigenous peoples," he said.
Paragraph 51 of the declaration document required states to respect their existing domestic laws on land rights "wherever possible" when it applied to indigenous people while the same paragraph in the programme of action declared that governments only need to prevent racial discrimination "where applicable" when it

63. African Timelines Part II
A timeline from 1st 15th centuries AD/CE, from Central Oregon Community College.Category Society History By Region africa Early Empires...... their political impact on inland peoples was virtually overview Islam african IndigenousCulture http postage stamp of Zanzibar, a swahili city, celebrating
http://www.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/timelines/htimeline2.htm
Humanities 211
Prof. Cora Agatucci
6 October 1998
Part II: African Empires
AD / CE 1st - 15th centuries
With Brief Discussions: Axum Advent of Islam
Mali Empire
Sundjata Keita, Griots ... Timbuktu
Contribute to African Timelines, add a link, or make a comment! New Submission Form "Let's face it think of Africa, and the first images that come
to mind are of war, poverty, famine and flies.
How many of us really know anything at all about
the truly great ancient African civilizations, which in their day,
were just as splendid and glorious as any on the face of the earth?"
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Wonders of the African World (PBS Online,1999): http://www.pbs.org/wonders/ ca. 300 (to 700) Rise of Axum or Aksum (Ethiopia) and conversion to Christianity. (By CE 1 st century, Rome had conquered Egypt, Carthage, and other North African areas; which became the granaries of the Roman Empire, and the majority of the population converted to Christianity). Axum spent its religious zeal carving out churches from rocks and writing and interpreting religious texts
  • Civilizations in Africa: Axum (Richard Hooker, World Civilizations, WSU):

64. Zfsheet09
The swahili form a big indigenous community in Resource Management in southern Africaregional workshop indigenous peoples and Sustainability Cases and Actions
http://www.sardc.net/imercsa/zambezi/zfsheet/zfsheet09.html
Musokotwane Environment Resource Centre for Southern Africa I M E R C S A Factsheet 9: Indigenous Knowledge Systems Factsheet No#9: Indigenous Knowledge Systems The traditional history of southern African societies is manifested in the hills, mountains, valleys, burial grounds and in specific sacred and historical sites.
Quite often outsiders do not recognise the importance of such sites and superimpose different values on the local people. It is believed that people's contact with nature has never been direct, it has always been mediated through knowledge structures.
Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) refers to a body of knowledge and beliefs built by a group of people, and handed down generations through oral tradition, about the relationship between living beings and their environment. It includes a system of organisation, a set of empirical observations about the local environment, and a system of self-management that governs resource use.
Most IKS are oral-based and often revealed through stories and legends. It is therefore, difficult to transmit ideas and concepts to those who do not share the language, tradition and cultural experience. Hence when a language is threatened or diminished in importance, there is a direct impact on the ability to express knowledge acquired through generations of experience.

65. USIU :: Programs & Courses :: Literature
his, her, or their contribution to the life and letters of africa. urban legends,jokes, etc.); examination of oral literature of selected indigenous peoples.
http://www.usiu.ac.ke/ProgCour/lit.htm
Accounting Anthropology Applications Business ... US Studies Literature LIT 1105 Introduction to World Literature: Fiction, Poetry, and Drama
Readings in the main genres of literature (fiction, poetry, and drama) throughout the cultures of the world; includes consideration of oral literature; introduction to critical approaches to literature.
Credit: 4 units LIT 1106 African Fiction I: Introduction to the African Novel
A survey of the development of the African novel from its beginnings to 1970. This is a reading course in the African novel; students are required to read one novel each week for ten weeks, as well as read closely and do an oral presentation and term paper on one particular novel during the quarter. Class time is devoted to discussions of a different novel each week, and students are expected to have read that novel, or substantial portions thereof, before coming to class.
Credit: 4 units LIT 1107 Introduction to African Literature
A survey of African literature in several genres, including folk tale, novel, short story, poetry, drama, and epic, from the English, French, Arabic, and native language traditions. This course serves as an introduction to the riches of African literature in various genres and traditions.

66. Dialogue Between Nations
going on to learn English, swahili, French and International Decade of the World'sIndigenous peoples, (19952004 as the General History of africa, the General
http://www.dialoguebetweennations.com/N2N/PFII/English/Kyazze.htm
Presentation By:
Jones Kyazze
UNESCO Representative to United Nations
At:
The Meeting of the NGO Committee On the International Decade of the Indigenous Peoples in the Framework of the United Nations
Year for Cultural Heritage, 2002 New York University
Wednesday, 15th May 2002
The Co-Chairs, Our Sponsors, the NGO Committee on the UN Decade of the World's Indigenous Peoples, Distinguished Panelists,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Good Evening,
Your programme this evening sets an ideal stage and framework for me as an indigenous African - Ugandan, brought up in a very traditionalist environment of Buganda, the best known and most assertive Kingdom in Uganda, who received all my primary education in traditional schools, dispensed in my Mother tongue, Luganda - which did not prevent me from going on to learn English, Swahili, French and Spanish later on, and continuing to take an active role in my culture while studying at Makerere University, Uganda, where History and Education were my major interests. With that background and, a long career at UNESCO, the major Specialised Agency of the United Nations system, entrusted with a mandate for Culture, I can attest to the value of being grounded into, and taking pride, in one's indigenous culture. Therefore, I greatly appreciate, with thanks, the opportunity given to me by the organizers of this meeting to address this important gathering, in this academic environment, of this great city of New York, endowed with a unique and beautiful cultural diversity.

67. IP - ASP :: Degree Programs
the equivalent of instruction in an indigenous African language students may enrollin 100 level swahili and Yoruba 014 Literatures of the African peoples, 3 sh.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~intl/ACAD/ASP/ASP_degree.html

About the Program
Faculty Students Degree Programs ... ASP HOME for faculty
IPRP
Degree Programs
The African Studies Program gives undergraduate students two opportunities for interdisciplinary study of Africa BA In African Studies Certificate Program BA in Global Studies Four Year Graduation Plan
BA In African Studies
This offers an opportunity to students to graduate with a BA in African American World Studies. The African studies option in the BA in African American World Studies is administered jointly by the chairs of the Department of African American World Studies and the African Studies program, in consultation with their faculties. Students are advised by the two chairs.
Required Courses:
The BA Program consists of 33 semester hours of course work in addition to four semesters, or the equivalent of instruction in an indigenous African language. Core Courses Language
Requirements
Humanities ... Diaspora Elective

Core Courses back
Critical Skills Seminar 3 s.h.

68. Ten Myths About Africa
difference among themselves than those among peoples of any In addition to indigenousAfricans (ie those whose Persians and Arabs among the swahili of East
http://jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu/~plarson/myths.html
Ten Myths About Africa, Africans, and African History In the American and European world, and perhaps in the world at large (outside of Africa), Africa is probably the most devalued and misunderstood of all continents. The reasons for this are embedded in modern world history. Beginning in the 15 th century Africa became a source of slaves for the Western world. African slaves had crossed the Sahara into what we now know as the Middle East for centuries before that. In order to dishonor, subordinate, and demean Africans, Europeans and others generated fundamental myths about Africa, Africans and African history. Many of these remain key components of modern racism. Although the era of slavery is itself gone, many of those fundamental myths remain strong in our society today. This is a list and discussion of ten myths that still abound in our Union of States. Myth #1: Africa has no ancient cultures, histories or civilizations and has therefore made no meaningful contributions to world history. Subsidiary to this, the values which we hold dear today like political freedom and democracy have no history in Africa.

69. Are Kanaka Maoli Indigenous To Hawai'i? Would The Status Of Being Indigenous Giv
So, among the peoples of the world, Polynesians have may trace their geneologies,learn swahili, and celebrate Polynesians may be indigenous in various Pacific
http://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/indigenous.html
Are kanaka maoli indigenous to Hawai'i? Would the status of being indigenous give them special rights?
Are kanaka maoli indigenous to Hawai'i? Do they have a special relationship to the land of Hawai'i that is different from any actual or possible relationship which non-kanaka maoli might have with the land?
Anthropological research suggests that the Polynesian islands were settled by people originating from Asia, spreading through the south Pacific, and arriving in Hawai'i very late in the process. Clearly Marquesas and Tahiti were settled long before Hawai'i. But China, Africa, and even the Americas had indigenous peoples living in those places for many thousands of years before anyone ventured into any of the Polynesian islands. So, among the peoples of the world, Polynesians have one of the shortest tenures in their so-called indigenous area. And within the Polynesian triangle, Hawai'i is one of the most recently settled island groups.
Kanaka maoli have ancestors whose bones have been in the land of Hawai'i for hundreds of years. But millions of Americans have ancestors whose bones have been in the land of England for many centuries, and that does not give those Americans political rights in England. Indeed, some kanaka maoli have more English blood than they have kanaka maoli blood, and more ancestral English bones in the land of England for more centuries than they have ancestral kanaka maoili bones in the land of Hawai'i. Where the bones are does not determine either indigenous status or political rights.

70. Tanzania: History - Title
dialects supplied the Bantu base of swahili, the mother the midnineteenth century,Ngoni peoples migrated from to the country of an indigenous people called
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/NEH/tz_hist.html
Tanzania: History
MAINLAND:
According to the archaeologists, Louis and Mary Leakey, Tanzania may be the site of origin for the world's oldest human beings. The first ancestors of man to walk erect inhabited this region nearly three million years ago[1] obtaining food by hunting and gathering. Early rock paintings have also been found in central Tanzania that lend support to the Leakey's theories.
THE COAST:
Although Tanzania's interior has a number of important prehistoric sites, including the Olduvai Gorge, evidence of the history of Tanganyika before the 19th century is primarily found in the coastal area, where contact with outsiders was more frequent. Trade between Arabia and the East African coast dates to the first century AD; there is also evidence of early connections with India. According to ninth century Arabic sources, the indigenous peoples of the coast were Cushitic language speakers, though some evidence of Bantu language speakers has also been found. The earliest outsiders, according to these sources, arrived at the coast in the ninth and tenth centuries A.D.; by the twelfth century, a number of trading posts and settlements were functioning on the coast and the offshore islands. At the end of the twelfth century, Kilwa had become an important town for commerce. Its development coincided with the arrival of the Shiraz people from the coast of southern Somalia coast, who established themselves as dynastic rulers both at Kilwa and on Mafia Island [2]. In the middle of the thirteenth century, a power struggle erupted between the Shiraz dynasty and the Shanga people from the Island of Shanje Ya Kati to the south of Kilwa. In the end, the Shiraz prevailed. By the end of the thirteenth century, Kilwa had gained control of the Sofala gold trade

71. Welcome To CAF
attention to the plight of indigenous peoples living in For additional informationon forest peoples issues, go oldest and bestpreserved swahili settlements in
http://www.conserveafrica.org/html/reports3.html
HOME ABOUT US GOALS FORUMS ... CONTACT US Africa: Environment a matter of survival - World Bank
These goals and priorities were set against "a backdrop of powerful trends in Africa, such as rapid and uncontrolled urbanisation, decentralisation and democratisation, the growing role of the private sector and regional integration, and globalisation," according to Binswanger. Those trends presented challenges and opportunities, as their impact on populations and their environment depended on how they were managed - technically, socially and politically, he said. In this context, it was important to strengthen the capacity of states and regions to make the environment and social equity fundamental features of economic development, he added.
EAST AFRICA: Forest peoples seek compensation
NAIROBI,9/7/2001 (IRIN) - Forest dwellers from seven African countries this week appealed for compensation for livelihoods compromised by government activities, and for vindication of their human rights, AFP news agency reported. Meeting in the Rwandan capital, Kigali, from 3-6 September, representatives of the Twa of Rwanda, the DRC and Uganda; the Ogieks of Kenya, the Maasai of Tanzania; the Bushmen of South Africa; and the Baka Bagyeli of Cameroon, paid particular attention to the plight of indigenous peoples living in, or displaced from, protected areas in their countries.

72. Foley Hoag
DC) on behalf of the africa Growth and Interface and the Plight of indigenous Peoplesin Post Reading; Travel; Politics. LANGUAGE SKILLS swahili (native); Kikuyu
http://www.fhe.com/profile.asp?aid=329

73. The MIA Curriculum
Only indigenous African languages are eligible to count of courses in Arabic, Hausa,swahili, Wolof, and Zulu Anthropology G4328 African peoples in the World
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/sipa/MIA/afr.html
McNeil became part of a small group of SIPA students who wanted to promote investment in Africa. “Today, development is much more about capital markets than it is about trade flows. Most people are not aware of the exponential growth of stock markets in Africa, especially South Africa. In the next few decades, I think infrastructure development based on new technologies is what is going to propel Africa forward. And I expect to be part of it.”
Lawrence McNeil, Jr.
Institute of African Studies Courses of Instruction and Research http://sipa.columbia.edu/ias
1103 International Affairs
Tel: 212-854-4663 Director: Mahmood Mamdani F ounded in 1959, the Institute of African Studies has prepared generations of Africa practitioners for careers in development, diplomacy, business, governance, journalism, law and human rights, and academic research and teaching. It provides a special forum for students, faculty, and others interested in the multitude of issues facing the African continent.
Programs
A weekly brown bag lecture series features presentations by academicians, diplomats, journalists, activists, business leaders, and development practitioners. The monthly University Seminar on Africa invites distinguished scholars to present their research; the Diplomatic Forum attracts diplomats from around Africa to speak to faculty and students. In addition, a number of conferences and panel discussions draw specialists from around the world. Each spring, students affiliated with the Institute organize a conference on a theme of their own choosing.

74. PCC Catalog - Section 6 - Description Of Courses
and colonial eras focusing on the indigenous peoples, how the and social developmentof the peoples in these the Western Sudan, Uganda, the swahili city states
http://www.paccd.cc.ca.us/instadmn/compsvcs/kiosk/CATALOG/C6HISTORY.htm
Course Catalog
Section 6 - Description of Courses
PCC Home Course Info Table of Contents Index Prev Page - hebrew
Next Page - hospitality
HISTORY (Social Sciences Division) Units Hours HIST 1A HISTORY OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION TO 1715 Prehistoric man; ancient Near Eastern civilizations; Greeks and Hellenization; the Roman Empire. Emergence of European, Byzantine and Islamic civilizations; manorialism and feudalism. Crusades, cities, medieval kingdoms. Humanism and Reformation. No credit if taken after Hist 3A or 3B. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. *CAN: HIST 2; HIST SEQ A (with Hist 1B) Units Hours HIST 1B HISTORY OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION FROM 1715 Survey of European history from 1715. Course includes the Enlightenment, Scientific Revolution, French Revolution, Napoleon, Western Imperialism, two World Wars, Cold War and the political, social and economic consequences of each. No credit if taken after Hist 3C or 3D. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. *CAN: HIST 4; HIST SEQ A (with Hist 1A) Units Hours HIST 2A HISTORY OF WORLD CIVILIZATIONS TO 1500 Survey of emerging regional cultures from the earliest civilizations to 1500. Focus on cultural evolutionary parallels, and the diffusion of ideas through migration and trade on a global scale.

75. J. Africa, 1914-1945. 2001. The Encyclopedia Of World History
French, Portuguese, Lingala, and swahili as common many were indeed the “indigenousauthorities”) and as the South African Native peoples Congress), labor
http://www.bartleby.com/67/2554.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference The Encyclopedia of World History PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Encyclopedia of World History. J.

76. Tamu Safaris Tours
the Muir family stayed in a private 800year-old swahili house recently We alsopromote the direct employment of indigenous African peoples in the
http://www.travelsource.com/safaris/tamusafaris.html

cosal@tamusafaris.com
Private Safaris and Educational Tours to Africa
Explore Africa with Tamu Safaris and experience the best in ecotourism. We specialize in eight African countries only:
  • Kenya
  • Tanzania
  • Seychelles
  • Madagascar
  • Botswana
  • Zimbabwe
  • Namibia.
  • South Africa
We know the peoples and the places, the languages and the landscapes, the fauna and the flora of each country intimately. Come join us!
The Tamu Safaris Experience
Katherine Muir wanted to go on a wildlife safari to Africa and was about to sign up with a well-known tour company when she decided to call Tamu Safaris on a word-of-mouth recommendation. With that single phone call, she decided to switch over to Tamu Safaris. Two months later, she was in Kenya, a single mother with three children, counting elephants at the edge of the alkaline plains in Amboseli National Park. There were 113 animals in total, one of the largest remaining elephant herds in East Africa. Before Amboseli, Mrs. Muir spent several nights in Masai Mara's little known Sekenani Valley, a place teeming with wildlife. Following Amboseli, she spent four days relaxing amid palm trees and the crystal clear waters of the Indian Ocean on Lamu Island, just a stone's throw off the coast of Kenya. On Lamu, the Muir family stayed in a private 800-year-old Swahili house recently declared one of Kenya's national historical monuments. From its whitewashed rooftop veranda, Mrs. Muir and her children took in the quiet sounds of Lamu town, Kenya's oldest living settlement. For a busy New Yorker from Manhattan, the absence of cars and crowds on Lamu Island provided a perfect holiday experience.

77. SOAS: Centre Of African Studies
languages of the world; development of indigenous African writing swahili didacticsongs; relations between swahilispeaking coastal peoples of East
http://www.soas.ac.uk/cas/memblang.html
Home Alumni Courses Diary ... Index
Centre of African Studies
MEMBERS OF THE CENTRE OF AFRICAN STUDIES LANGUAGES, LITERATURES AND CULTURES Dr David Appleyard da3@soas.ac.uk Reader in the Languages of the Horn of Africa, SOAS
Ethiopian linguistics, Semitic languages (especially Amharic) and Cushitic languages (especially Agaw languages); the Afroasiatic connections of Cushitic; early Amharic texts; Amharic literature.
Horn of Africa, Ethiopia Dr Cedric Barnes cb62@soas.ac.uk . British Academy Post-Doctoral Fellow
The evolution of state and identity in the Horn of Africa, with emphasis on frontiers, interaction between culture and politics, and modernity.
Ethiopia, Somalia/Somaliland, Eritrea Dr Malami Buba mb1@soas.ac.uk Lector in Hausa, SOAS
Hausa Language and Culture, and Islamic religious culture in Nigeria.
Nigeria Dr David Dalby dalby@linguasphere.org Emeritus Reader in West African Languages, SOAS
Comparative study and mapping of African languages; referential classification of the languages of the world; development of indigenous African writing systems; problems of language and education in Africa.
Sub-Saharan Africa Dr Lucy ld@soas.ac.uk

78. SOMALI BANTU - Their History And Culture
of the coastal Bantuspeaking African peoples with these The swahili people livedand worked for the next seven centuries with the indigenous African population
http://www.culturalorientation.net/bantu/sbhist.html
culturalorientation.net -home
SOMALI BANTU CULTURE PROFILE CHAPTER C ONTENTS P REFACE ... IBLIOGRAPHY SCROLL TO: Colonial Period Slavery Social Impact of Slavery After Slavery ... Post Civil War History Persian and Arab traders established business contacts with east Africans over 1,000 years ago. These relations, coupled with refugees who fled the turmoil in Arabia after the death of Muhammad in the 7 th century, resulted in a significant number of Arab immigrants residing on the coast of east Africa. The mixing of the coastal Bantu-speaking African peoples with these Arab immigrants led to the emergence of the Swahili people and language. The Swahili people lived and worked for the next seven centuries with the indigenous African population. During this time, the Swahili people expanded their trade and communication further inland and to the south with the other African groups, including ancestral tribes of the Somali Bantu.
Colonial Period
By the time the Portuguese arrived in the 15 th century, there existed a modern economy and advanced society on the east coast of Africa that some claim rivaled those in Europe. Portuguese colonial rule, however, disrupted the traditional local economic networks on the east African coast, resulting in a general breakdown of the once prosperous Swahili economy.

79. Rio-plus-10.org
FoE Togo 16, Nur Hidayati, indigenous peoples/Forest, Indonesia Media contact, SouthAfrica Eng…, 083 7507560 Summit Team, Tanzania swahili, Eng , 072
http://www.rio-plus-10.org/en/contact/
Home News Info Action ... media contact in Johannesburg You are here: Home Contact media contact in Johannesburg
How to reach FRIENDS OF THE EARTH INTERNATIONAL (FoEI) at the Earth Summit in Johannesburg, Press Officers and SPOKESPEOPLE FoEI Spokespeople, Title / Issue specialist, Country of origin+languages, SAfr.Mobile(+27), Origin country Tel , Email, Origin organisation [FoEI member]

1, Ricardo Navarro, FoEI Chair, El Salvador [Sp, Eng, Fr, Swedish, 072 4015392, 503 220 0046, foeichair@yahoo.com, CESTA/ FoE El Salvador
2, Tony Juniper, FoEI Vice-chair, United Kingdom [Eng], 072 4015393, 44 207 490 1555, ianw@FoE.co.uk, FoE EWNI*=England,Wales,Northern Ireland
3, Daniel Mittler, Earth Summit coordinator, Germany [Ge,Eng], 072 4015394, 49 173 9234747, daniel.mittler@bund.net, BUND/ FoE Germany
5, Craig Bennett, Corporate Accountability, United Kingdom [Eng], 072 4064748, 44 207 490 1555, craigb@foe.co.uk, FoE EWNI*
8, Yvonne Yanez, Ecological Debt, Ecuador [Sp,Fr,Eng], 072 4015396, 593 22 547 516, ivito99@yahoo.com, Accion Ecologica/ FoE Ecuador
9, Kevin Dunion, Environmental Justice, United Kingdom [Eng], 072 4015398, 44 207 490 1555, ianw@FoE.co.uk, FoE EWNI*

80. OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF ASIA PACIFIC ECOTOURISM CONFERENCE 2002
Languages English Native speaker swahili Fluent Spanish Fair United Nations “Yearof indigenous peoples” and the role of indigenous communities in
http://www.mattasabah.com/apeco/speakers_costa.asp
home message sponsors organizers ... sabah info media terms contact us Endorsed By: SPEAKERS' PROFILE Back to main
Costas D. Christ

5802 Greentree Road
Bethesda, Maryland 20817
Telephone: 301-564-1553
E-mail: cosal@tamusafaris.com
Professional Experience
Senior Director
– Ecotourism, Conservation International, Washington, D.C. March 2001 – Present. Responsible for managing and supervising Conservation International’s Ecotourism Department, including ecotourism development projects in more than 20 countries worldwide; the establishment of ecotourism technical units within CI’s new Centers for Biodiversity Conservation in Africa, Asia and South America; supervising a Washington D.C.-based team of ecotourism specialists; and direct coordination of ecotourism strategies and activities with CI’s senior management team.
Country Director , U.S. Peace Corps, Belize. August 1999 – February 2001. Program emphasis in Belize is on environmental education, ecotourism and community development. Coordinate with top government officials, non-governmental organization leaders, and private sector business representatives in Belize, oversee all Peace Corps operations in-country, including program development and management, multimillion dollar budget, supervision of 14 full-time staff and 55 volunteers, monitoring and evaluation of all field projects.

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