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Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons™
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- Guinea-Bissau; Portugal; Africa; European colonialism; saharan africa; PAIGC; African Party for Independence in Guinea-Bissau and the Cape Verde Islands; (1)
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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Social and Cultural Anthropology
Ua12/2/78 Newsletter, Kappa Sigma
Ua12/2/78 Newsletter, Kappa Sigma
Student Organizations
Newsletter created by and about Kappa Sigma fraternity in 1974.
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 7, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 7, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Displacement Of Persons By Major Public Works: Anthropological Analysis Of Social And Cultural Benefits And Costs From Stream Control Measures--Phase 5, Philip Drucker, Charles Robert Smith, Edward B. Reeves
Displacement Of Persons By Major Public Works: Anthropological Analysis Of Social And Cultural Benefits And Costs From Stream Control Measures--Phase 5, Philip Drucker, Charles Robert Smith, Edward B. Reeves
KWRRI Research Reports
This study is concerned with social change and social impact of a major public works project on the human population required to relocate the persons being forced to sell to the Federal Government or turn over through condemnation proceedings homes, farms, and/or businesses to facilitate completion of a Federally authorized stream control measure. It is intended to test the utility of anthropological method and concept in evaluating and explicating sociocultural impact, and in addition to check hypotheses concerning importance of impact on social and economic areas of culture of the persons to be displaced, on their emigration patterns, and their …
Northeast Folklore Society Newsletter, Vol. 7, Northeast Archives Of Folklore And Oral History
Northeast Folklore Society Newsletter, Vol. 7, Northeast Archives Of Folklore And Oral History
Northeast Folklore Society Newsletter
[NOTE : After a seven year's silence, we are going to try to crank up the Newsletter again. Hopefully it will appear three times a year. In order to assure such astonishing regularity, the Editorship has been snatched from me (I'm delighted!) and placed in the responsible hands of Florence Ireland. I wish her luck, and I know you all join me in that.--E.D.I.]
On October 21th the Archives staff travelled to Camden, Maine to put on a workshop entitled, "Oral History and the Bicentennial." It was a day-long affair sponsored jointly by the Northeast Folklore Society and the Maine …
Ua12/2/78 Periodic Poop Sheet, Kappa Sigma
Ua12/2/78 Periodic Poop Sheet, Kappa Sigma
Student Organizations
Newsletter created by and about Kappa Sigma fraternity in 1974.
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 6, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 6, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Ua12/2/35 1974 Miss Western Kentucky University Scholarship Pageant, Wku Interfraternity Council
Ua12/2/35 1974 Miss Western Kentucky University Scholarship Pageant, Wku Interfraternity Council
Student Organizations
Program for the 1974 Miss Western pageant sponsored by the WKU Interfraternity Council.
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 5, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter, Issue 5, Nepal Studies Association, John Scholz
Nepal Studies Association Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Guinea-Bissau: 24 September 1973 And Beyond, Richard A. Lobban Jr.
Guinea-Bissau: 24 September 1973 And Beyond, Richard A. Lobban Jr.
Faculty Publications
On 24 September 1973 history was made in Africa. The first sub- Saharan African nation unilaterally declared its sovereignty from European colonialism following a protracted armed struggle. Most African nations gained their independence from colonial powers by negotiation and peaceful transfer of authority. True enough, this transfer was sometimes linked with prolonged periods of demonstrations, strikes, and nationalist propagandizing, but with the exception of Algeria (and perhaps Ethiopia) there were no wars of national liberation which led to a declaration of independence until Guinea-Bissau. The implications of this move are immense.