Results 161 to 170 of about 2,429 (205)

The Aid-Migration of Trade-Off [PDF]

open access: yes
Azam, Jean-Paul, Berlinschi, Ruxanda
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Chapter 9. Antipassive derivation in Soninke (West Mande)

Typological Studies in Language, 2021
Abstract Soninke, a West Mande language spoken in Mali, Mauritania, Gambia, and Senegal, provides crucial support to the view that accusative languages may have fully productive antipassive derivations. In Soninke, the distinction
Denis Creissels
exaly   +3 more sources

Cultivating Hustlers: The Agrarian Ethos of Soninke Migration

Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 2013
Sedentariness has been disregarded in migration studies. Although recent scholarship pays greater heed to immobility, the latter is often narrowly conceptualised as the exact opposite of mobility. This article attempts to overcome such dichotomies by focusing on agrarian life and activities in one of the most migratory rural contexts in West Africa ...
Paolo Gaibazzi
exaly   +4 more sources

Francophone Migrations, French Islam and Wellbeing: The Soninké Foyer in Paris

, 2022
Addressing several issues of significance in the fields of Anthropology of Migration, Politics of Healthcare, Religious and Francophone Studies, this book pursues an unprecedented line of research by bringing to the fore the geopolitical dimension of ...
Dafne Accoroni
semanticscholar   +1 more source

THE RANK EFFECT: POST-EMANCIPATION IMMOBILITY IN A SONINKE VILLAGE*

The Journal of African History, 2012
ABSTRACTThe end of internal slavery in West Africa is generally associated with an increase in labour mobility. This article complicates this picture by showing that the effects of status – the rank effect – on people's ability to migrate often outlasted emancipation.
Paolo Gaibazzi
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Studies on the Soninke Societal Organization and its Flaws

2023
This article investigates the contemporary Soninke societal organization and its flaws. The Soninke are conservative and hate social disorder. The Soninke families called xabiilo (clans) are stratified hieratically, but profoundly characterized by some social inequalities.
exaly   +3 more sources

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