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University College, Huddinge, Sweden). Instructions for Authors Please refer to www.brill.nl/jra; e-mail drmill@wm.edu for more details. The Journal of Religion in Africa (print ISSN 0022-4200, online ISSN 1570-0666) is published 4 times a year by BRILL, Plantijnstraat 2, 2321 JC Leiden, The Netherlands, tel

In: Journal of Religion in Africa

Malian Town (by R OMAN L OIMEIER ) AFRIKA - STUDIECENTRUM ABSTRACTS An overview of journal articles and edited works on Africa in the field of the social sciences and the humanities that are available in the library of the ASC in Leiden, The Netherlands ISSN 0022-4200 (paper version) ISSN 1570

In: Journal of Religion in Africa

Southern African Development Community Qualifications Framework (SADCQF) and the East African Community Regional Qualifications Framework for Higher Education. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE The issue of recognition of qualifications in higher education has been discussed within UNESCO since 1947. Since then

In: Regionalization of African Higher Education

November 2017 ]. McCarthy , J. 2018 . “ Harlem is everywhere .” Project Muse , 65 , 2 : 6 – 13 . DOI: 10.1353/dss.2018.0022 . Mavhunga , C. C. 2017 . “ Introduction .” In What do science, technology, and innovation mean from Africa? , edited by C. C. Mavhunga , 1 – 27 . Cambridge, MA

Open Access
In: African Futures

, University of Deusto Publications. Ayoo, P. O. (2009). Reflections on the digital divide and its implications for the internationalization of higher education in a developing region: The case of East Africa. Higher Education Policy, 22(3), 303–318. Babes, M. S. (2009). Algeria towards a knowledge

In: Regionalization of African Higher Education
Author:

humanities that are available in the library of the ASC in Leiden, The Netherlands 159 174 212 242 275 317 VO LU M E 37.2 (2007) B R I L L OUT OF AFRICA? 1 VOLUME 37.2 (2007) ISSN 0022-4200 (paper version) ISSN 1570-0666 (online version) JRA 37,2_colophon.indd I JRA 37,2_colophon.indd I 4/19/07 2:41:42 PM 4

In: Journal of Religion in Africa

African Lactase Persistence Allele, -14010*C Compared to the Archaeological Evidence for Livestock The presence of the east African lactase persistence allele, -14010*C, amongst present-day southern African populations is important because it signifies the presence of a proto-historic, fresh

Open Access
In: Africa, the Cradle of Human Diversity
Author:
Monumenta Graeca et Romana (MGR) is a peer-reviewed series concerned with the study of material and visual culture of the Greek and Roman world, chronologically ranging from later prehistory to Late Antiquity – i.e. from the middle of the second millennium BCE to the late first millennium CE. Geographically, the series covers Western Europe to the Near East, from the Black Sea to North Africa. The series publishes monographs and anthologies, as well as analytical catalogues raisonés of material in the collections of museums and other public institutions. It also publishes monographs or edited volumes that offer cohesive surveys of specific objects, types of monuments, or regions in Mediterranean and classical archaeology (in the widest possible sense). The survey format is flexible but authors should aim to be as inclusive as possible in their coverage and approaches, designing each volume to be a useful starting point for scholars and students into a new area of research. Additionally, a new subseries, MGR New Directions in Mediterranean Archaeology, is established in 2023 and will publish volumes with an explicit theoretical or methodological agenda. All MGR volumes may be published in all Open Access formats that Brill offers. All volumes, whether traditionally published or in Open Access, can be accompanied by additional data or documentation available on an online repository hosted by Brill. The language of MGR and its subseries is English.

, Private Bag 0022, Gaborone, Botswana. This article is a revised version of a paper presented at the Annual Conference of the African Studies Association, San Francisco, November 23-26, 1996. 346 Within these port cities, or in their immediate surroundings, there were usually extensive open spaces for

In: Journal of Asian and African Studies