Search results for "Oralism"

showing 10 items of 54 documents

Primary identities in the lower Omo valley: migration, cataclysm, conflict and amalgamation, 1750–1910

2011

This article applies the notion of primary identity to explore the emergence of ethnic identities in the southern-most tract of the lower Omo valley. Current identities here are the result of two correlated patterns of movement that have occurred over the past 150 years: migration to the valley by organised pastoralists and scattered groups, and a general movement down the river and into the Omo delta, where the ecological niche generated by the regular flooding of the Omo River provided a rich variety of livelihood alternatives. The major migrations reported here were connected to great population movements that occurred in East Africa from the nineteenth century, often provoked by catacly…

Cultural StudiesDeltaHistoryoral historySociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectPastoralismPopulationEthnic groupDaasanachSettore M-DEA/01 - Discipline DemoetnoantropologicheKaraeducationmedia_commonEcological nicheeducation.field_of_studyFlooding (psychology)LivelihoodOmo valleyNyangatomGeographyAnthropologyPolitical Science and International RelationsEthnologyProsperityEthiopiaethnic identitypastoralism
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Pastoralists are peoples: Key issues in advocacy and the emergence of pastoralists' rights

2017

This article deals with the rights-based approach to development that in the last decade has informed discourse on pastoralism. It focuses on the organisations that have engaged in pastoral advocacy at the global level, considering the dynamic conceptions of development, human rights and policy that provide their cultural and operative background. It outlines the convergence of indigenous rights with the core challenges of pastoralism, and the emergence of the new concept of 'pastoralists' rights', eventually considered as a separate domain. It argues that the mobility paradigm of pastoral development may not by itself provide an adequate answer to the problems of pastoral communities, unle…

Economic growth050204 development studies05 social sciencesPastoralism0507 social and economic geographyMinority rightAdvocacyKey issues050701 cultural studiesPolitical science0502 economics and businessPastoral developmentPastoralismWAMIPSettore M-DEA/01 - Discipline DemoetnoantropologicheDemography
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Genetically 'pure' Fasciola gigantica discovered in Algeria: DNA multimarker characterization, trans-Saharan introduction from a Sahel origin and spr…

2020

Fascioliasis is a freshwater snail-borne zoonotic helminth disease caused by two species of trematodes: Fasciola hepatica of almost worldwide distribution and the more pathogenic F. gigantica restricted to parts of Asia and most of Africa. Of high pathological impact in ruminants, it underlies large livestock husbandry losses. Fascioliasis is moreover of high public health importance and accordingly included within the main neglected tropical diseases by WHO. Additionally, this is an emerging disease due to influences of climate and global changes. In Africa, F. gigantica is distributed throughout almost the whole continent except in the north-western Maghreb countries of Morocco, Algeria a…

General VeterinaryGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybiologybusiness.industryFasciola giganticaDistribution (economics)Nomadic pastoralismGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationGeographyHepaticaVector (epidemiology)HerdNeglected tropical diseasesLivestockbusinessSocioeconomicsTransboundary and emerging diseasesREFERENCES
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Lactase persistence and milk consumption in Europe: an interdisciplinary approach involving genetics and archeology:

2013

The ability to digest milk during adulthood (lactase persistence) is a genetically determined trait present only in humans. Its origin and diffusion are correlated with the development of pastoralism and the consumption of fresh milk. This work will present the genetic and archaeologi- cal data that allow the reconstruction of the co-evolutionary process between dairying culture and lactase persistence, as well as a discussion of the chronology and the way lactase persistence spread in Europe. Sposobnost presnavljanja mleka v odrasli dobi (laktazna persistenca) je genetsko pogojena značilnost, navzoča le pri ljudeh. Njen izvor in razširitev sta povezana z razvojem pastirstva in uživanjem sv…

Geneticslactase persistenceArcheologyPastoralismEuropean NeolithicConsumption (sociology)BiologyFresh milkLactase persistenceAnthropologydairyingTraitlcsh:Archaeologygeneticslcsh:CC1-960gene-culture coevolution
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The community conserved landscape of the Borana Oromo, Ethiopia

2011

Purpose - This paper seeks to describe an attempt to assess at the local level the progress that has been internationally achieved in recognition of community and indigenous rights, and of indigenous and community conserved areas. An action-research exercise was implemented in Ethiopia with a mobile indigenous people of evaluating customary as well as government-led governance of the environment, with the objective of strengthening the capacity of the Borana-Oromo to conserve their landscape. Design/methodology/approach - This paper is based on collaborative research implemented by the authors in 2002 while SOS Sahel Ethiopia was introducing collaborative forest management, and on a 2007 ac…

ICCAbiodiversity conservationSettore M-DEA/01 - Discipline Demoetnoantropologichelandscape approachlivelihoodspastoralism
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Toward a holistic understanding of pastoralism

2021

Pastoralism is globally significant in social, environmental, and economic terms. However, it experiences crises rooted in misconceptions and poor interdisciplinary understanding, while being largely overlooked in international sustainability forums and agendas. Here, we propose a transdisciplinary research approach to understand pastoralist transitions using (1) social, economic, and environmental dimensions, (2) diverse geographic contexts and scales to capture emerging properties, allowing for cross-system comparisons, and (3) timescales from the distant past to the present. We provide specific guidelines to develop indicators for this approach, within a social-ecological resilience anal…

INDICATORSDYNAMICSgradientsParticipatory methods010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesmedia_common.quotation_subjectPastoralismENVIRONMENTAL KUZNETS CURVE010501 environmental sciencesECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE01 natural sciences615 History and ArchaeologyMANAGEMENTEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)laiduntaminenSociologyTraditional knowledgeEnvironmental planningpaimentolaisetsustainability dimensions1172 Environmental sciencesglobal change0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonSustainable development5203 Global Development Studieskestävä kehitysCOPRODUCTIONglobalisaatioRESILIENCEPOLICYrangelandsindicatorsCoproductionParadigm shiftSustainabilityekologinen kestävyysSUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTNOMADIC PASTORALISTSsosiaalinen kestävyyspaimentolaisuusPsychological resiliencetraditional knowledgeGrazing managementindikaattoritpastoralism
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Uwagi o mowie cynicznej : Kallikles i Trazymach jako mówcy cyniczni

2019

Cynical speech is a proper form of manifestation of what we call cynicism. It takes the form of a persuasive strategy which assumes the achievement of the rhetorical consubstantiation of a cynical speaker and her/his auditorium. Cynical speech is a game that takes place between three sides: a cynical speaker posing as an immoralist, a moralist and an auditorium, the acquisition of which is the aim of both interlocutors. At the outset, the cynical speaker gives the identity of naive dilettantes’ to both the members of the auditorium and the moralist and then tries to persuade the audience to side with him and take on the role of the students of a cynical expert. This is what can be described…

Kenneth Burkeimmoralismrhetoricmoralismcynicismcynical modulationStudia Philosophica Wratislaviensia
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Il paternalismo giuridico tra principio del danno e moralismo giuridico. Alcune riflessioni a partire dal libro di Giorgio Maniaci

2021

Nell’articolo si sostiene che il paternalismo giuridico non costituisce un autonomo principio di criminalizzazione. A tal fine, si analizza il ruolo dell’immoralità dell’atto nel funzionamento dei tre princìpi di criminalizzazione del moralismo giuridico, del principio del danno e del paterna- lismo giuridico: la tesi è che, al di là delle apparenze, tutti e tre questi princìpi suppongano che l’immoralità dell’atto costituisca l’oggetto intenzionale di una criminalizzazione legittima. Que- sta tesi è sostenuta, dapprima, con riferimento specifico al principio del danno, del quale si pro- spettano diversi possibili tipi di moralizzazione, e poi, più diffusamente, con riferimento al pa- terna…

Legal paternalism Legal Moralism Harm Principle
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Orality in the literature of Africa's Horn : oral traditions, forms and pastoral mythologies literature, marks of orality in the literature

2012

The Horn of Africa has a traditional oral literature which is rich and varied as the rest of the continent, starting from pastoral mythology to poetry, legend and storytelling. But with the social upheaval which occurred with the arrival of European settlers and the introduction of writing, the chain of transmission of the oral tradition is threatened. Many Europeans have sought to describe the habits and customs of these people. Whereas on the other hand, the writers from the Horn of Africa are often inspired by giving it (orality) and a new way of doing it. The following research work strives to reflect traditional forms of orality and their impact on modern literature.

Littérature[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureTransmission chainChaîne de transmissionOralityCorne de l’Afrique[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureOral tradition[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureLiteratureHorn of AfricaTradition oralePastoralismOralitéMythologies pastoralesPastoralismePastoral mythologies
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The Arrival of Steppe and Iranian Related Ancestry in the Islands of the Western Mediterranean

2019

A series of studies have documented how Steppe pastoralist-related ancestry reached central Europe by at least 2500 BCE, while Iranian farmer-related ancestry was present in Aegean Europe by at least 1900 BCE. However, the spread of these ancestries into the western Mediterranean where they have contributed to many populations living today remains poorly understood. We generated genome-wide ancient DNA from the Balearic Islands, Sicily, and Sardinia, increasing the number of individuals with reported data from these islands from 3 to 52. We obtained data from the oldest skeleton excavated from the Balearic islands (dating to ∼2400 BCE), and show that this individual had substantial Steppe p…

Mediterranean climate0303 health sciencesBalearic islandsgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySteppemedia_common.quotation_subjectImmigrationPastoralismgovernment.political_districtAncient historyhumanities03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAncient DNABronze AgeClassical periodgovernment030217 neurology & neurosurgery030304 developmental biologymedia_common
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