THE KENYA GAZETTE Published by Authority of the Republic of Kenya

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THE KENYA GAZETTE Published by Authority of the Republic of Kenya THE KENYA GAZETTE Published by Authority of the Republic of Kenya (Registered as a Newspaper at the G.P.O.) - Vol. LXVII-NO. 10 NAIROBI, 9th March 1965 Price: Sh. 1 CONTENTS GAZETTE NOTICES I PAGB Appointments, etc. E.A. Customs and Excise-Application for Anti- dumping . 231 The Children and Young Persons Act, 1963-Approved Voluntary Society . 214 Civil Aircraft Accident-Inspector's Investigations . 231 Law Examination for Administrative Officers-Results . 214 1 Liquor Licensing . 23 1 The Mining Act-Expiry of Mining Locations . 215 Probale and Administration . 231 Kenya Stock . .. 215 Resident Magistrate's Court at Nakuru-Unclaimed Petty . Deposits .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 233 The Advocates Act-Notice . 215 Bankruptcy Jurisdiction , , , . , , , . 233 The Wild Animals Protection Act-Appointments . 215 The Societies Act-Registration, etc. 234 Sale of Farms-Nyandarua District . 215 1 The Companies Act-incorporation, etc. 236 The Trust Land Act-Setting Apart of Land . 221 The African Christian Marriage and Divorce Act- Ministers Licensed . 238 The Industrial Court- The Trade Unions Act-Registrations . 238 Cause No. 11 of 1964 . 226 Local Government Notices . 238 Cause No. 4 of 1965 . .. .. 227 Business Transfers . 239 The Supreme Court of Kenya at Mombasa District Registry-Criminal Sessions Calendar .. 228 Dissolution of Partnership . 239 The Animal Diseases Act-Infected Areas 228 . changes of N~~~ , . , . , . , , , . 239 Vacancies .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 229 SUPPLEMENT No. 18 The Land Titles Act-Secondary Certificate of Ownership 230 Bills, 1965 The Registration of Titles Act-Provisional Certificates 230 1 Industrial Licences . SUPPLEMENT No. 19 Legislative Supplement E.A.R. & H.-Tariff of Harbour Dues and Charges LEGALNOTICE NO. PAGE No. 5 . .. 230 63-The Registered Land (Application) (No 4) Tenders . 231 I Order, 1965 . 119 2l4 THE KENYA GAZEW E 9f* A4arch 1965 GAZSTTE Ntm cE No. 857 D. Kolir (A 30), African Courts. S. Karena (A 237), African Comts. THE PUBLIC SERVICE COM MISSION OF KENYA J. K. M'matbiu (A 225), African Courts. A. K. Mwanje (A 50), Administration. APN INTMENTS N. Mugallo (A 61), African Courts. L. Mwangi (A 83), Administration. Jos1AH KIN ONUI ARAP KIRUI, te be District Commissioner, W. Mayenga (A 104), African Courts. Central Nyanza District, Nyanma Province,with effect from G. Mwago (A 227), African Courts. 3rd February 1965. G. Mugenyo' (A 233), African Courts. JusTus KALEwA NooTo, to be District Oëcer, Nyeri District, P, Mwangl (A 234), African Colzrts. Central Province, with elect from 8th February 1965. C. M. Ndingbri (A 20), Judicial. LIVINGSTONB 'IYBULA OKARA,to be District Commissioner, South C. M . Ndoo (A 181'), M rican Colzrts. Province, with efect from 27th N. Ngugi (A 204), Administration. Nyanza District, Nyanza W. A. M. Ndilo (A 96), Judicial. December 1964. J. C. Nyundo (A 234), African Courts. CLIFFORD NICHOLAS BOLTON, to aCt as Director of Audit, B. T. Orangi (A 223), Administration. Excheque'r and Audit Department,with efect from 1st Janu- B. Ochieng (A 165), African Courts. ary 1965: J. Ombodo (A 57), African C'ourts. EvAxs OMANI OBARS, to bo Distdct Oflker, KilifiIlistrict, (loast S. 0. Ogessa (A 16), Administration. G. H. Omondi (A 25), Administration. Province, with olect from 26th January 1965. E. M. Psenjen (A 48), Administration. FluNcls M wANIKI KASINA, B.A., to act as Senior Assistant A. S. A. Shuruty (A 218), Administratiofl. Secrdary, Ministry of External Asairs, with esect from 1st W. K. Kttiend (A 112), African Courts. N ovem ber 1964. J. K. Samson (A 215*), African Courts. J, Shichenga (A 58), African Courts. PROMOTIONS A. Tarus (A 184), African Courts. A. A. Tanjut (A 39), African Courts. Pxtm CLXRK NAxcxpaow, u.x. (cxNTAB.), to beUnder Secretary, J. W . Wanpla (A 130), African C'ottrts. Treasury, with eiect from 20th July 1963. M. Wabuko (A 66), African Courts. JOSBPH AUGUSTINE GETHENJI, to be Assistant Director of Personnel, Directorate of Personnel,with effect from 1st July (ii) Section 11 ; - 1964. Passed By Order of the Commission. D. 0. Gesicho (A 101), African Courts. B. Gathaka (A 231), African Courts. W . M UREITHI, D. G. Kimani (A 14), Administration. Secretary. J. Kahi (A 7X, African Courts. J. Masinde (A 132), African Co.urts. F. O'. S. Masinde (A 137), African Courts. G AZETTB N OTICE N o. 85% J. S. M athenge (A 2), Administration. C. J. Ndiga (A 177), African C, ourts. THE CHILDREN AND YOUNG PERSONS ACT, 1963 R. Njogu (A 80), African Courts. (No. 8 oj 1963) H. Owiro (A 179), African Courts. Tite followiag passu in individual papers are published for ArrRovl!o VOLUNTARY SOCIETY the information of unsuccessful candidates. Tho opporplnlty is IT IS hereby notised for gcneral information that in exercise taken to remind candidates that a pass in an indivldual papor of the powers conferred by section 63 (1) of the Cllildrqn and cannot be carried forward to the next examination : each Young Persons Act, 1963, the Minister for Home Affalrs has Section of the examination must bo taken and passed as a aP1FOVed- whole. 'rj.rs KlsuMu Dlocsss oF 'I'HB MILL HILL CATHOLIC MlsslON, E. N. Abrams (A 90), Criminal Procedure Code. P.0. Box 150, KAKAMEGA H. Asava (A 60), Criminal Procedure Code. to be an approved society for the purposes of the said Act. S. Aloyo (A 62), Evidence. ' S. Alushiola '(A 64), Criminal Procedure Codo and Dated this 3rd day of M arch 1965. Evidence. P. arap Bor (A 25 A), Criminal Prooedure Code. J. Barno (A 185), Penal Codo. D. ARAP MOI, K. Bonyei (A 186), Criminal Procedure Code. Mlnîster pr Home AFairs. H. Chesbol (A' 140), Local Aots. A. A. Chepkwony (A 44), Evidonce. E. Eshirumgo (A 59), Penal Code and Crlminal Procedure GAZETTE NOTICE No. 859 Code. E. Edambo (A 75), Civil Procedure Code. LAW BXAMINATION FOR ADM INISTRATIVE OFFICERS L. D. Galgallo (A 92), Penal Codo and Crimlnal lirocedure Code. JAXUARY 1965 1. Hunja (A 228), Penal Code and Evidence. B. 0. Ibrahijw (A 26), Civil Procèdure Code. Thg following oëcers hav-e passed the Law Examinadon for E. A. Idwasl (A 4), Local Acts. Adnutlistrative Oëcers hold on 11th, 12th and 13th Januàry A. Juma (A 144), Evidence. 1965 :- B. W. Kollikho (A 139): Local Acts. (t8 Passed Whole Examinatîon A. Kymunya (A 29), Cnminal Procedure Ceodeu L. Klmani (A 214), Loc-al Acts. S. Ajode (A 94), Administration. S. Kirega (A 27), Local Acts. J. Mwangsombo (A 121), Administration. P. M. Kuhora (A 115), Penal Code and Evidonce. P. T. Thomas (A 13), Administration. S. Khayanjo (A 74), Penal Code and Criminal Procetlro Code. (b) Paned Part 0/ Examinatîon K. A. Kochei (A 37), Ltjcal Acts. A. J. Kubo (A 187), Criminal Procedure Code. (i) Section I : - J. T. A. Kilel (A 41), Criminal Procedure Code. Passed wîth Dîstînction H. M. Kitambi (A 194), Local Acts. F. P. Loile (A 47), Penal Codo. J. G. Mutiga (A 46), Administration. H. M . Lempaka (A 87), Evidence. M. M. Ngao' (A 208), Judicial. M. M. Munyi (A 97), Penal Code and Evidence. A. M utsotso (A 65), Penal Code and Criminnl Procedm'o Paned Code. S. H. Adera (A 164), M rican Cottrts. K. Mureli (A 70), P'enal Code and Evidence. B. Achoki (A 103), African Courts. L. Mwangi (A 83), Local Aots. A. Aruwa (A 143), African C'ourts. E. Mong'qre (A 106), Criminal Procedure Code. M. L. Anditi Mingala (A 6), Administration. j. G. Muttga (A 46), Local Acts. C. N. Chomba (A 203), Administration. S. Malo. (A 149), Penal Code. J. D. Chango' (A 236), African Cottrts. J. P. Mrangovya (A 205), Local Acts. J. K. Etemeesi (A 23), Administration. A. Murlu (A 230), Penal Code and Evidence. P. Gachanja (A 34), African Courts. G. Mugenyo (A 233), Civil Proceduro Code. E. A. Idwmsi (A 4), Administrqtion. P. E. Masirdet (A 9O, Penal Code a&':G Evidertco. B. M. Kamwana (A 51), Admmistration. F,. K. Nallianya (A 131), Penal Code and Bvidence. J. M. Kiarie (A 216), M rican Cbttrts. J. Nyaga (A 213), Penal Codo. S. Kiroga (A 27), Judicial. B. Nyarangi (A 54), Penal Cbde and Evidence. R. A. Kqeech (A 45), M rican Courts. W . A. M . Ndilo (A 96), Civil W'oceduro Code. H. M. Kltambi (A 194), M rican Cburts. R. Njeru (A 162), Criminal Procedlzre Code. 9 t h M- a r c b. 1 9 Kw 5 THE K EN YA GAZETTE 215 J. Njeru (A 229), Penal Code. GAZETTE èCOTICE ;QO. 862 C. 0. Okwach (A 126), Penal Code and Criminal Proceduro Code. THE ADVOCATES ACT T. Otele (A 136), Local Acts. (Cap. 16) G. K. A. Okumu (A 24), Evidence. J. S. Ondiek (A 163), Penal Code and Criminal Procedure No'rlcs Code. D. Ogada (A 168), Penal Code. PURSUANT to regulation 13 (3) of the Advocates D. Onunda (A 171), Criminal Procedurc Code. (Admission) Regulations, 1963, as amended, it is horeby notified D. Ogutu (A 172), Penal Code. that an examination to be passed by applicants for admission L. Okech (A 180), Criminal Procedure Code and Evidence. ta tho Roll of Advocates under section 12 (i) (ii) of the Act J. Ong'weny (A 67), Criminal Procedure Code and Evidence. will be held at the Kenya School of Law, Kenyatta Avenue, J. L. S. Ooma (A 102), Civil Procedure Code. Nairobi, from Thursday, 8th April !to W ednesday, 14th April L. Ogutu (A 152), Criminal Procedure Code. 1965. A detailed timetable will be lssued to candidates. A. Okoko (A 156), Civil Procedure Code. Z. Oyula (A 158), Civil Procedure Code. Entries should be submitted by 15th M arch 1965, and candi- F'. P. A. Ongus (A 182), Penal Code and Eddence. dates are advised that, if three or more candidates enter from R.
Recommended publications
  • Fishers and Fish Traders of Lake Victoria: Colonial
    FISHERS AND FISH TRADERS OF LAKE VICTORIA: COLONIAL POLICY AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF FISH PRODUCTION IN KENYA, 1880-1978. by PAUL ABIERO OPONDO Student No. 34872086 submitted in accordance with the requirement for the degree of DOCTOR OF LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY in the subject HISTORY at the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AFRICA PROMOTER: DR. MUCHAPARARA MUSEMWA, University of the Witwatersrand CO-PROMOTER: PROF. LANCE SITTERT, University of Cape Town 10 February 2011 DECLARATION I declare that ‘Fishers and Fish Traders of Lake Victoria: Colonial Policy and the Development of Fish Production in Kenya, 1895-1978 ’ is my original unaided work and that all the sources that I have used or quoted have been indicated and acknowledged by means of complete references. I further declare that the thesis has never been submitted before for examination for any degree in any other university. Paul Abiero Opondo __________________ _ . 2 DEDICATION This work is dedicated to several fishers and fish traders who continue to wallow in poverty and hopelessness despite their daily fishing voyages, whose sweat and profits end up in the pockets of big fish dealers and agents from Nairobi. It is equally dedicated to my late father, Michael, and mother, Consolata, who guided me with their wisdom early enough. In addition I dedicate it to my loving wife, Millicent who withstood the loneliness caused by my occasional absence from home, and to our children, Nancy, Michael, Bivinz and Barrack for whom all this is done. 3 ABSTRACT The developemnt of fisheries in Lake Victoria is faced with a myriad challenges including overfishing, environmental destruction, disappearance of certain indigenous species and pollution.
    [Show full text]
  • The Luo People in South Sudan
    The Luo People in South Sudan The Luo People in South Sudan: Ethnological Heredities of East Africa By Kon K. Madut The Luo People in South Sudan: Ethnological Heredities of East Africa By Kon K. Madut This book first published 2020 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2020 by Kon K. Madut All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-5275-5743-X ISBN (13): 978-1-5275-5743-7 I would like to dedicate this book to all the Luo People in South Sudan, Ethiopia, Congo, Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania TABLE OF CONTENTS Author Biography ...................................................................................... ix About this Edition ...................................................................................... xi Acknowledgements ................................................................................. xiii Chapter One ................................................................................................ 1 The Context Background Theoretical Framework Investigating Luo Groups The Construction of Ethnicity and Language Chapter Two ............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • A Conversation with Dance History: Movement And
    A CONVERSATION WITH DANCE HISTORY: MOVEMENT AND MEANING IN THE CULTURAL BODY A Dissertation Submitted to The Temple University Graduate Board In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY By Seónagh Odhiambo January, 2009 © by Seónagh Odhiambo 2009 All Rights Reserved ii ABSTRACT A Conversation with Dance History: Movement and Meaning in the Cultural Body Seónagh Odhiambo Doctor of Philosophy Temple University, 2009 Doctoral Advisory Committee Chair: Dr. Kariamu Welsh This study regards the problem of a binary in dance discursive practices, seen in how “world dance” is separated from European concert dance. A close look at 1930s Kenya Luo women’s dance in the context of “dance history” raises questions about which dances matter, who counts as a dancer, and how dance is defined. When discursive practices are considered in light of multicultural demographic trends and globalisation the problem points toward a crisis of reason in western discourse about how historical origins and “the body” have been theorised: within a western philosophical tradition the body and experience are negated as a basis for theorising. Therefore, historical models and theories about race and gender often relate binary thinking whereby the body is theorised as text and history is understood as a linear narrative. An alternative theoretical model is established wherein dancers’ processes of embodying historical meaning provide one of five bases through which to theorise. The central research questions this study poses and attempts to answer are: how can I illuminate a view of dance that is transhistorical and transnational? How can I write about 1930s Luo women in a way that does not create a case study to exist outside of dance history? Research methods challenge historical materialist frameworks for discussions of the body and suggest insight can be gained into how historical narratives operate with coercive power—both in past and present—by examining how meaning is conceptualised and experienced.
    [Show full text]
  • The Mdgs and Sauri Millennium Village in Kenya
    An Island of Success in a Sea of Failure? The MDGs and Sauri Millennium Village in Kenya Amrik Kalsi MBA: Master of Business Administration MSc: Master of Science in Management and Organisational Development MA: Master of Arts A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Queensland in 2015 The School of Social Science Abstract For a number of decades, foreign aid-supported poverty reduction and development concepts, and policies and programmes developed by development agencies and experts implemented since the 1950s, have produced limited short-term and sometimes contradictory results in Kenya. In response to this problem in 2000, the adoption of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) was in many respects a tremendous achievement, gaining unprecedented international support. The MDGs model has since become the policy of choice to reduce poverty and hunger in developing countries by half between 2000 and 2015, being implemented by the Millennium Village Project (MVP) ‘Big-Push’ model, seemingly designed as a ‘bottom-up’ approach. Poverty reduction and sustainable development are key priorities for the Kenyan government and the Kenya Vision 2030 blueprint project. The MDGs process, enacted as the Millennium Village Project (MVP) in Kenya for poverty reduction, is now at the centre of intense debate within Kenya. It is widely recognised that foreign aid maintained MVP and sustainable development through the UN and local efforts, especially in their present form, have largely failed to address poverty in Kenya. Furthermore, not enough was known about the achievements of the MVP model in real- world situations when the MVP model interventions were applied in the Sauri village.
    [Show full text]
  • Identity Dynamics in the Context of Male Circumcision and HIV/AIDS Among Luo Youth in Kisumu, Kenya Dissertation Committee: Dr
    Negotiating Identity: Identity Dynamics in the Context of Male Circumcision and HIV/AIDS among Luo Youth in Kisumu, Kenya By Salome N. Wawire B.A., Agra University, 1994 M.A., University of Nairobi, 2000 A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Anthropology at Brown University Providence, Rhode Island May 2010 Copyright 2010 by Salome N. Wawire This dissertation by Salome N. Wawire is accepted in its present form By the Department of Anthropology as satisfying the Dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Date______________ __________________________________ Nicholas Townsend, Advisor Recommended to the Graduate Council Date______________ __________________________________ Daniel J. Smith, Reader Date______________ __________________________________ Philip Leis, Reader Date ______________ Wanjiku Khamasi, Reader Approved by the Graduate Council Date______________ __________________________________ Sheila Bonde, Dean of Graduate School iii SALOME N. WAWI RE Brown University, Department of Anthropology, Box 1921● Providence, RI, 02912 ●USA - - - ● Cell: 1-401- 588-0615 ● Fax: 1-401- 863-7588 [email protected] Education Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island Ph.D., Anthropology (2010) Pre-doctoral Trainee, Anthropological Demography Dissertation: Negotiating Identity: Identity Dynamics in the Context of Male Circumcision and HIV/AIDS among Luo Youth in Kisumu, Kenya Dissertation Committee: Dr. Nicholas Townsend (Chair),
    [Show full text]
  • Myths of Origin and Their Cultural Implications in the Tigania Community of Meru County
    MYTHS OF ORIGIN AND THEIR CULTURAL IMPLICATIONS IN THE TIGANIA COMMUNITY OF MERU COUNTY BY RUKUNGA MWAMUKUI PRISCILA, B.ED. C50/CE/11989/08 A RESEARCH PROJECT SUBMITTED TO THE SCHOOL OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS OF KENYATTA UNIVERSITY MAY, 2019 ii DECLARATION iii DEDICATION I would like to dedicate this work to my family –My loving husband Wilfred, my sons Nimo and Oliver and daughter Beryl. iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am grateful to God for giving me health and strength to be able to undertake this work. I would like to extend my gratitude to my family members, especially my husband for encouraging me to soldier on, and to my mother who taught me how to speak my mother tongue, without which I would not have carried out this research. My special thanks to my supervisors, Dr Speranza Ndege and Dr. Wallace Mbugua for bearing with my many shortcomings. What initially looked like an impossible feat became easier for me to navigate through because of their humility and scholarly concern. I will forever be grateful to them. I appreciate the effort of Prof.Oluoch Obura and Dr. Paul Mukundi for guiding me to find the references I needed for this research. They taught me the value of networking with people who would later be helpful to my study. I am also grateful to the entire Isiolo Boys‟ teaching fraternity for giving me ample time to carry out my research. I recognize the input of my informants and story tellers who put in a lot of effort to ensure that I captured the stories well to be able to transcribe and translate them appropriately.
    [Show full text]
  • Economic Change in Kasipul and Kabondo, 1800-1962
    ECONOMIC CHANGE IN KASIPUL AND KABONDO, 1800-196 to Ai IZ BY PETER ODHIAMBO NDEGE untvfw ’ df natkou NRlWr' A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN THE UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI LIBRARY 01018720 JULY, 1987. This thesis is my original work and has not been presented for a degree in any other University. This thesis has been submitted for examination with my knowledge as University Supervisor: (i) CONTENTS: Pa g e s MAPS ....................................................................................................... v TABLES ................................................................................................ v FIGURE ................................................................................................ Vi ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ......................................................................... vii ABSTRACT.............................................................................................. ix CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION.................................................................................... I The Study Area ................................................................................ 2 Statement of the Problem and Research Objective ............................................................................................ 6 Theoretical Framework ................................................................ 7 Literature Review ......................................................................... 9 Hypotheses .........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Exploration of Food Culture in Kisumu: a Socio-Cultural Perspective
    Journal of Arts & Humanities Volume 06, Issue 07, 2017, 74-86 Article Received: 27-03-2017 Accepted: 14-04-2017 Available Online: 24-07-2017 ISSN: 2167-9045 (Print), 2167-9053 (Online) DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18533/journal.v6i7.1162 Exploration of Food Culture in Kisumu: A Socio-Cultural Perspective Dr. Fredrick Z.A. Odede1, Dr. Patrick O. Hayombe, Prof. Stephen G. Agong ABSTRACT Increasingly food culture in the context of socio-cultural dimension is becoming important for sustainable urban development. In the last four years food festivals have been held in Kisumu attracting several interests both from within and without the City. The Kisumu fish night event of 2013 marked the melting point of food culture in Kisumu. This paper thus explores the noble intention of integrating food culture in Kisumu as a socio-cultural capital for the advancement of City sustainable development agenda. To an agrarian society, life is about food from its production, the processing/preservation up to the consumption or the sharing. People connect to their cultural or ethnic background through similar food patterns. People from different cultural backgrounds eat different foods leading to the question: Are Luos in Kisumu defined by their own food culture? This study further investigated the mode of production, and storage of food resources, examined food cuisines of the Luo community in Kisumu, and assessed the food habits, practices and beliefs associated with food cuisines, as well as, the nutritional and socio-cultural values of Luo cuisines. The research employed qualitative methods of data collection such as interviews, observation, focused group discussion and photography using purposive and snowball sampling technique.
    [Show full text]
  • Culture and Customs of Kenya
    Culture and Customs of Kenya NEAL SOBANIA GREENWOOD PRESS Culture and Customs of Kenya Cities and towns of Kenya. Culture and Customs of Kenya 4 NEAL SOBANIA Culture and Customs of Africa Toyin Falola, Series Editor GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sobania, N. W. Culture and customs of Kenya / Neal Sobania. p. cm.––(Culture and customs of Africa, ISSN 1530–8367) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0–313–31486–1 (alk. paper) 1. Ethnology––Kenya. 2. Kenya––Social life and customs. I. Title. II. Series. GN659.K4 .S63 2003 305.8´0096762––dc21 2002035219 British Library Cataloging in Publication Data is available. Copyright © 2003 by Neal Sobania All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2002035219 ISBN: 0–313–31486–1 ISSN: 1530–8367 First published in 2003 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. www.greenwood.com Printed in the United States of America The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48–1984). 10987654321 For Liz Contents Series Foreword ix Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Chronology xvii 1 Introduction 1 2 Religion and Worldview 33 3 Literature, Film, and Media 61 4 Art, Architecture, and Housing 85 5 Cuisine and Traditional Dress 113 6 Gender Roles, Marriage, and Family 135 7 Social Customs and Lifestyle 159 8 Music and Dance 187 Glossary 211 Bibliographic Essay 217 Index 227 Series Foreword AFRICA is a vast continent, the second largest, after Asia.
    [Show full text]
  • Otto Dietrich and the Future of Persecution Law
    The Forgotten Nuremberg Hate Speech Case: Otto Dietrich and the Future of Persecution Law GREGORY S. GORDON* Among internationaljurists, the conventional wisdom is that atrocity speech law sprang fully formed from two judgments issued by the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg (IMT): the crimes against humanity conviction of Nazi newspaper editor Julius Streicher, and the acquittal on the same charge of Third Reich Radio Division Chief Hans Fritzsche. But the exclusive focus on the IMT judgments as the founding texts of atrocity speech law is misplaced. Not long after Streicher and Fritzsche, and in the same courtroom, the United States Nuremberg Military Tribunal (NMT) in the Ministries Case, issued an equally significant crimes againsthumanity judgment against Reich Press Chief Otto Dietrich, who was convicted despite the fact that the charged language did not directly callfor violence. So why is the Dietrichjudgment, a relatively obscure holding, issued sixty-five years ago, so significant today, after the development of a substantialbody ofad hoc tribunaljurisprudence on atrocity speech? It is because the seemingly antithetical holdings in Streicher and Fritzsche are more than just the subject of academic discourse. The next generation of atrocity speech decisions, it turns out, is at loggerheads about the relationship between hate speech and persecution as a crime against humanity. Trial chambersfor the InternationalCriminal Tribunalfor Rwanda (ICTR) have found that hate speech, standing alone, can be the basis for charges of crimes against humanity (persecution). A trial chamber for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has reached the opposite conclusion. And surprisingly, these judicial decisions, like the academic commentary, have completely ignored the Dietrich judgment.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloads/Gaiasns 1.Pdf
    INVESTIGATING PEOPLE-FOREST RELATIONSHIPS AROUND CENTRAL KENYA’S NYANDARWA FOREST RESERVE: UNDERSTANDING THEIR SUSTAINABILITY THROUGH INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS by Gloria Kendi Borona B.E.S., Kenyatta University, 2004 M.B.A., University of Nairobi, 2009 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES (Forestry) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) November 2017 © Gloria Kendi Borona, 2017 Abstract This study explored how people-forest relationships are forged around Kenya’s Nyandarwa Forest Reserve, and how Indigenous Knowledge Systems of Agĩkũyũ people around the Reserve might contribute to healthy, sustainable people-forest relationships in light of the country’s changing social, economic, and political situations. The study sought to examine:1) how the indigenous communities around Nyandarwa Forest Reserve traditionally understood and sustained interdependencies with the forest; 2) how these interdependencies have transformed consistent with Kenya’s post- independence changes in social, economic, and political situations; 3) to what extent local, national, and international efforts to promote healthy sustainable people-forest relationships are incorporating local communities’ Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS); and, 4) how these communities’ IKS might inform the proposition of an environmental conservation framework for sustainable people-forest relationships. The study was guided by post-colonial indigenous research paradigms anchored in decolonizing methodologies. These methodologies were buttressed by indigenous theories that consider communities as spiritual beings with multiple relations. The study was informed by the traditions and cultural heritage of the Agĩkũyũ people, and augmented by Afrocentric philosophies that underlie African ways of knowing and value systems.
    [Show full text]
  • The Last of Old Africa
    The Last of Old Africa The Last of Old Africa Big-Game Hunting in East Africa by Brian Nicholson Safari Press Inc. The Last of Old Africa © 2001 by Brian Nicholson. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used or reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical reproduction, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the publisher. The trademark Safari Press ® is registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. Nicholson, Brian e-Book Safari Press Inc. 2001, Long Beach, California ISBN 978-1-57157-454-1 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 99-69161 Readers wishing to receive the Safari Press catalog, featuring many fine books on big-game hunting, wingshooting, and sporting firearms, should visit our Web site at www.safaripress.com. iv DEDICATION This work is dedicated to the memory of my late wife, Melva, who spent so many years in East Africa with me. It is also an element of family history for my two daughters, Susan and Sandra, and my son, Philip, who grew up in the sunlight and storm of the Selous Game Reserve. v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I started to write this book in 1995. For various reasons there were repeated delays, followed by a break of nearly two years. Many people have suggested I write an autobiography, and some have persistently followed up on this. John Moller went to much trouble to type and print the original draft of my story up to when I joined the Tanganyika Game Department in February 1950.
    [Show full text]