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Volume 4-2:2011
JSEALS Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society Managing Editor: Paul Sidwell (Pacific Linguistics, Canberra) Editorial Advisory Board: Mark Alves (USA) George Bedell (Thailand) Marc Brunelle (Canada) Gerard Diffloth (Cambodia) Marlys Macken (USA) Brian Migliazza (USA) Keralapura Nagaraja (India) Peter Norquest (USA) Amara Prasithrathsint (Thailand) Martha Ratliff (USA) Sophana Srichampa (Thailand) Justin Watkins (UK) JSEALS is the peer-reviewed journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, and is devoted to publishing research on the languages of mainland and insular Southeast Asia. It is an electronic journal, distributed freely by Pacific Linguistics (www.pacling.com) and the JSEALS website (jseals.org). JSEALS was formally established by decision of the SEALS 17 meeting, held at the University of Maryland in September 2007. It supersedes the Conference Proceedings, previously published by Arizona State University and later by Pacific Linguistics. JSEALS welcomes articles that are topical, focused on linguistic (as opposed to cultural or anthropological) issues, and which further the lively debate that characterizes the annual SEALS conferences. Although we expect in practice that most JSEALS articles will have been presented and discussed at the SEALS conference, submission is open to all regardless of their participation in SEALS meetings. Papers are expected to be written in English. Each paper is reviewed by at least two scholars, usually a member of the Advisory Board and one or more independent readers. Reviewers are volunteers, and we are grateful for their assistance in ensuring the quality of this publication. As an additional service we also admit data papers, reports and notes, subject to an internal review process. -
A Comprehensive Exploration of the Genetic Legacy and Forensic Features of Afghanistan and Pakistan Mongolian-Descent Hazara
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/333992859 A comprehensive exploration of the genetic legacy and forensic features of Afghanistan and Pakistan Mongolian-descent Hazara Article in Forensic Science International: Genetics · June 2019 DOI: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2019.06.018 CITATIONS READS 0 253 11 authors, including: Guanglin He Atif Adnan Sichuan University China Medical University (PRC) 73 PUBLICATIONS 210 CITATIONS 28 PUBLICATIONS 47 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE SEE PROFILE Allah Rakha Ivy Hui-Yuan Yeh University of Health Sciences Lahore Nanyang Technological University 42 PUBLICATIONS 161 CITATIONS 32 PUBLICATIONS 103 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Y-Chromosomal Investigation for Common Ancestral Components between Worldwide Jewish and Yousafzai Population from Pakistan View project RM Y-STRs pedigree study from Pakistan View project All content following this page was uploaded by Guanglin He on 25 June 2019. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Forensic Science International: Genetics xxx (xxxx) xxx-xxx Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Forensic Science International: Genetics journal homepage: www.elsevier.com Short communication A comprehensive exploration of the genetic legacy and forensic features of Afghanistan and Pakistan Mongolian-descent Hazara Guanglin He a , b , ⁎ ⁎⁎, 1 , Atif Adnan c , 1 , Allah Rakha d , Hui-Yuan Yeh e , Mengge Wang -
Yunnan Provincial Highway Bureau
IPP740 REV World Bank-financed Yunnan Highway Assets management Project Public Disclosure Authorized Ethnic Minority Development Plan of the Yunnan Highway Assets Management Project Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Yunnan Provincial Highway Bureau July 2014 Public Disclosure Authorized EMDP of the Yunnan Highway Assets management Project Summary of the EMDP A. Introduction 1. According to the Feasibility Study Report and RF, the Project involves neither land acquisition nor house demolition, and involves temporary land occupation only. This report aims to strengthen the development of ethnic minorities in the project area, and includes mitigation and benefit enhancing measures, and funding sources. The project area involves a number of ethnic minorities, including Yi, Hani and Lisu. B. Socioeconomic profile of ethnic minorities 2. Poverty and income: The Project involves 16 cities/prefectures in Yunnan Province. In 2013, there were 6.61 million poor population in Yunnan Province, which accounting for 17.54% of total population. In 2013, the per capita net income of rural residents in Yunnan Province was 6,141 yuan. 3. Gender Heads of households are usually men, reflecting the superior status of men. Both men and women do farm work, where men usually do more physically demanding farm work, such as fertilization, cultivation, pesticide application, watering, harvesting and transport, while women usually do housework or less physically demanding farm work, such as washing clothes, cooking, taking care of old people and children, feeding livestock, and field management. In Lijiang and Dali, Bai and Naxi women also do physically demanding labor, which is related to ethnic customs. Means of production are usually purchased by men, while daily necessities usually by women. -
Ethnic Minority Development Plan
Public Disclosure Authorized World Bank Financed Guiyang Rural Road Project Public Disclosure Authorized Ethnic Minority Development Plan Public Disclosure Authorized World Bank Financed Guiyang Transport Project Management Office Public Disclosure Authorized August, 2013 1 Abbreviations DPs Displaced Persons EMDP Ethnic Minority Development Plan GNP Gross National Product IMO Independent Monitoring Organization OP Operational Policy PAD Project Appraisal Document PAPs Project Affected Persons PDI Project Design Institute PFSR Project Feasibility Study Report PMO Project Management Office PPAs Project Affected Areas PRO Project Resettlement Office PSA Project Social Assessment PSR Project Supervision Report RAP Resettlement Action Plan RO Resettlement Office RPF Resettlement Policy Framework SAT Social Assessment Team 2 Contents 1 Ethnic Minority Development Plan Preparation ........................................... 5 1-1 Major Findings of Social Assessment for the Project ............................................. 5 1-2 the Objectives of EMDP................................................................................................... 9 1-3 Method and Procedures for EMDP Preparation ......................................................... 9 2 Brief Description of Ethnic Minorities in PAAs ........................................ 11 2-1 Distribution of Ethnic Minorities in PAAS ................................................................ 11 2-2 Customs and Culture of Ethnic Minorities in PPAs ................................................ -
Link to Full CV(PDF)
James N. Stanford, Ph.D. Professor and Chair Department of Linguistics Dartmouth College Office and Postal Address: Contact: Department of Linguistics [email protected] HB 6220 - Anon. Hall room 218 (603)646-0099 Dartmouth College Hanover, NH 03755 ACADEMIC POSITIONS July 2019 to present: Chair of Dartmouth Department of Linguistics July 2020 to present: Professor of Linguistics, Dartmouth Editorial positions: Editorial Board, Language Variation and Change, 2015-present Associate Editor, Asia-Pacific Language Variation, 2015-present Editorial Team, Frontiers: Computational Sociolinguistics, 2018-present Editorial Advisory Committee, American Speech, 2018-2020 July 2014 to June 2020: Associate Professor of Linguistics, Dartmouth Winter 2013: Acting Chair of the Dartmouth Linguistics and Cognitive Science Program July 2008 to June 2014: Assistant Professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Science, Dartmouth Fall 2007-Spring 2008: Lecturer, Rice University Linguistics Department AWARDS AND FUNDING Dartmouth Dean of the Faculty Award for Outstanding Mentoring and Advising (2020) Karen E. Wetterhahn Award for Distinguished Creative or Scholarly Achievement (2014) PI, Scholarly Innovation and Advancement Award, Dartmouth College, $40,000 (2018-2020) Sociolinguistic exploration of a matrilineal/matrilocal society in rural southwest China PI, National Science Foundation grant with Kalina Newmark '11 and Nacole Walker '11 English dialect features of indigenous people in North America: A cross-continental investigation (2013-16), $87,679 -
Guiyang Integrated Water Resources Management Sector Project
Ethnic Minorities Development Plan Yudongxia Reservoir Urban Water Supply Subproject Ethnic Minorities Development Plan Document Stage: Draft Project Number: P38594 September 2006 PRC: Guiyang Integrated Water Resources Management Sector Project Prepared by Black & Veatch (Asia) Ltd., in conjunction with the Guiyang Municipal Government for the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The ethnic minorities development plan is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB’s Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. GUIYANG INTEGRATED WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT PROJECT IN THE PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA Ethnic Minorities Development Plan Yudongxia Reservoir Urban Water Supply Subproject September 5 , 2006 GUIYANG MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT THIS REPORT WAS PREPARED BY THE BORROWER AND IS NOT AN ADB DOCUMENT ENDORSEMENT OF THE ETHNIC MINORITIES DEVELOPMENT PLAN The Guiyang Municipal Government has requested, via the Central Government of the Peoples Republic of China, a loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to finance part of the Guiyang Integrated Water Resources Management Project. The Project will therefore be implemented in accordance with the social safeguards policies of the ADB. This Ethnic Minorities Development Plan represents a key requirement of the ADB. The EMDP presents the situation and actions to be taken to comply with social safeguards concerning ethnic minorities for the subproject. It includes procedures for implementation and monitoring to ensure that the EMDP prepared for this subproject of the sector loan will be effectively executed. The Guiyang Municipal Government hereby endorses the attached EMDP and guarantees that funds will be made available as stipulated in the budget. -
Appendix 1. a Brief Description of China's 56 Ethnic Groups
Appendix 1. A Brief Description of China’s 56 Ethnic Groups Throughout history, race, language and religion have divided China as much as physical terrain, political fiat and conquest.1 However, it is always a politically sensitive issue to identify those non-Han people as different ethnic groups. As a result, the total number of ethnic groups has never been fixed precisely in China. For example, in 1953, only 42 ethnic peoples were identified, while the number increased to 54 in 1964 and 56 in 1982. Of course, this does not include the unknown ethnic groups as well as foreigners with Chinese citizenship.2 Specifically, China’s current 56 ethnic groups are, in alphabetical order, Achang, Bai, Baonan, Blang, Buyi, Dai, Daur, Deang, Derung, Dong, Dongxiang, Ewenki, Gaoshan, Gelao, Han, Hani, Hezhe, Hui, Jing, Jingpo, Jino, Kazak, Kirgiz, Korean, Lahu, Lhoba, Li, Lisu, Manchu, 1 The text is prepared by Rongxing Guo based on the following sources: (i) The Ethnic Minorities in China (title in Chinese: “zhongguo shaoshu minzu”, edited by the State Ethnic Affairs Commission (SEAC) of the People’s Republic of China and published in 2010 by the Central Nationality University Press, Beijing) and (ii) the introductory text of China’s 56 ethnic groups (in Chinese, available at http://www.seac.gov.cn/col/col107/index.html, accessed on 2016–06–20). 2 As of 2010, when the Sixth National Population Census of the People’s Republic of China was conducted, the populations of the unknown ethnic groups and foreigners with Chinese citizenship were 640,101 and 1448, respectively. -
Cosmogonic and Anthropogenic Myths in Sui Oral Literature DOI: 0.12775/LC.2019.028
Kamil Burkiewicz* Cosmogonic and Anthropogenic Myths in Sui Oral Literature DOI: http://dx.doi.org/1 0.12775/LC.2019.028 Abstract: This article provides a brief and selective introduction to the Sui oral literature, thematically limited to cosmogonic and anthropogenic myths. An essential description is provided of the Sui living in southern China, mainly in rural areas of the southwestern region of Guizhou Province, their society, numbering 400 thousand people many of whom still preserve indigenous customs and traditions, and their language which, as other members of the Kam-Sui branch of the Tai-Kadai family, possess analytic, isolating and tonal features. The description is followed by an explanation of the most popular motifs of the Sui oral literature, many of which are shared with neighbouring ethnic groups. Separate paragraphs are also dedicated to the genres and structural characteristics of Sui oral literature that have a special social function as the repository of people’s collective memory. The literature is exemplified through fragments of two songs recorded in Li Fanggui’s Studies on the Sui Language (1966), accompanied by English glosses and poetic renderings. The latter constitute the first attempt to translate Sui literature while preserving its syllabic structure and rhymes. 183 Keywords: Sui, oral literature, myths 2(30) 2019 * PhD in linguistics; assistant professor at the Chair of Oriental Studies, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. His research field concern languages and cultures of ethnic minorities in China, especially the Sui people, and their relations with Chinese language and culture. E-mail: [email protected] | ORCID: 0000-0002-7839-1051. -
UNDERSTANDING CHINA a Diplomatic and Cultural Monograph of Fairleigh Dickinson University
UNDERSTANDING CHINA a Diplomatic and Cultural Monograph of Fairleigh Dickinson University by Amanuel Ajawin Ahmed Al-Muharraqi Talah Hamad Alyaqoobi Hamad Alzaabi Molor-Erdene Amarsanaa Baya Bensmail Lorena Gimenez Zina Ibrahem Haig Kuplian Jose Mendoza-Nasser Abdelghani Merabet Alice Mungwa Seddiq Rasuli Fabrizio Trezza Editor Ahmad Kamal Published by: Fairleigh Dickinson University 1000 River Road Teaneck, NJ 07666 USA April 2011 ISBN: 978-1-457-6945-7 The opinions expressed in this book are those of the authors alone, and should not be taken as necessarily reflecting the views of Fairleigh Dickinson University, or of any other institution or entity. © All rights reserved by the authors No part of the material in this book may be reproduced without due attribution to its specific author. THE AUTHORS Amanuel Ajawin is a diplomat from Sudan Ahmed Al-Muharraqi is a graduate student from Bahrain Talah Hamad Alyaqoobi is a diplomat from Oman Hamad Alzaabi a diplomat from the UAE Molor Amarsanaa is a graduate student from Mongolia Baya Bensmail is a graduate student from Algeria Lorena Gimenez is a diplomat from Venezuela Zina Ibrahem is a graduate student from Iraq Ahmad Kamal is a Senior Fellow at the United Nations Haig Kuplian is a graduate student from the United States Jose Mendoza-Nasser is a graduate student from Honduras Abdelghani Merabet is a graduate student from Algeria Alice Mungwa is a graduate student from Cameroon Seddiq Rasuli is a graduate student from Afghanistan Fabrizio Trezza is a graduate student from Italy INDEX OF -
Annual Report 年報
(Incorporated in the Cayman Islands with limited liability) (於開曼群島註冊成立之有限公司) Stock Code 股份代號 : 2678 ANNUAL REPORT 年報 2 This Annual Report is printed on environmentally friendly paper 0 1 2016 本年報以環保紙張印刷 6 ANNUAL REPORT 年報 TABLE OF CONTENTS 目錄 02 Financial Highlights 財務摘要 03 Corporate Profile and Structure 企業簡介及架構 06 Chairman’s Statement 主席報告書 10 Management Discussion and Analysis 管理層討論及分析 36 Corporate Governance Report 企業管治報告 60 Directors and Senior Management 董事及高級管理層 65 Corporate Information 公司資料 67 Report of the Directors 董事會報告 86 Environmental, Social and Governance Report 環境、社會及管治報告 116 Independent Auditor’s Report 獨立核數師報告 123 Consolidated Balance Sheet 綜合資產負債表 125 Consolidated Income Statement 綜合收益表 126 Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income 綜合全面收益表 127 Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity 綜合權益變動表 129 Consolidated Cash Flow Statement 綜合現金流量表 130 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 綜合財務報表附註 財務摘要 FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS OPERATING PERFORMANCE DATA 經營表現數據 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 二零一六年 二零一五年 二零一四年 二零一三年 二零一二年 For the year ended 31 December RMB ’000 RMB ’000 Change RMB ’000 RMB ’000 RMB ’000 截至十二月三十一日止年度 人民幣千元 人民幣千元 變動 人民幣千元 人民幣千元 人民幣千元 Revenue 收入 13,647,737 10,574,854 29.1% 10,470,321 8,228,533 7,341,474 Gross profit 毛利 2,645,143 1,905,832 38.8% 1,294,214 1,583,383 1,124,116 Profit for the year 年度溢利 1,201,073 588,968 103.9% 306,721 1,126,027 486,306 Profit attributable to 股東應佔溢利 shareholders 1,187,531 590,826 101.0% 306,721 1,125,890 486,538 Earnings per share 每股盈利 — Basic — 基本 RMB人民幣1.33元 RMB人民幣0.67元 98.5% RMB人民幣0.35元 -
The 8Th International Conference on Medical Geology
The 8th International Conference on Medical Geology I The 8th International Conference on Medical Geology INDEX OS1 Environmental Geochemistry and Human Health Abstract No. Page OS10006 Radon and lung cancer: the need for national action plans ......................... 2 OS10026 Biogeochemical assessment of the impact of Ciscarpathian landscape on population health ........................................................................................ 3 OS10028 As spatial distribution characters in Mexico, revealed by Low Density Geochemical Baseline Results ................................................................... 5 OS10038 Changes of serum NTX and TRACP-5b in adults of coal-burning fluorosis areas in Guizhou Province ......................................................................... 6 OS10044 Study on relationship between fluorine in geological environment and endemic fluorosis in huai river basin ......................................................... 7 OS10050 Contamination and health risk assessment of heavy metals and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons(PAHs) in street dusts from Kaifeng, China ......... 8 OS10055 Fluoride levels in soil and vegetables in the vicinity of a phosphating plant9 OS10075 Arsenic levels in drinking water and dietary components and its health effects on the rural residents of west Tibet, China .................................. 10 OS10080 Effects of bisphenol A on human health and related toxicity mechanisms12 OS10090 The toxic effects and possible mechanisms of bisphenols ....................... -
Population Genetics, Diversity and Forensic Characteristics of Tai–Kadai‑Speaking Bouyei Revealed by Insertion/Deletions Markers
Molecular Genetics and Genomics (2019) 294:1343–1357 https://doi.org/10.1007/s00438-019-01584-6 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Population genetics, diversity and forensic characteristics of Tai–Kadai‑speaking Bouyei revealed by insertion/deletions markers Guanglin He1,2 · Zheng Ren3 · Jianxin Guo2 · Fan Zhang3 · Xing Zou1 · Hongling Zhang3 · Qiyan Wang3 · Jingyan Ji3 · Meiqing Yang3 · Ziqian Zhang2 · Jing Zhang2 · Yilizhati Nabijiang2 · Jiang Huang3 · Chuan‑Chao Wang2 Received: 25 December 2018 / Accepted: 30 May 2019 / Published online: 13 June 2019 © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2019 Abstract China, inhabited by over 1.3 billion people and known for its genetic, cultural and linguistic diversity, is considered to be indispensable for understanding the association between language families and genetic diversity. In order to get a better understanding of the genetic diversity and forensic characteristics of Tai–Kadai-speaking populations in Southwest China, we genotyped 30 insertion/deletion (InDel) markers and amelogenin in 205 individuals from Tai–Kadai-speaking Bouyei people using the Qiagen Investigator DIPplex amplifcation kit. We carried out a comprehensive population genetic relation- ship investigation among 14,303 individuals from 84 worldwide populations based on allele frequency correlation and 4907 genotypes of 30 InDels from 36 populations distributed in all continental or major subregions and seven linguistic phyla in China. Forensic parameters observed show highly polymorphic and informative features for Asians,