Niger Destination Guide

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Niger Destination Guide Niger Destination Guide Overview of Niger Key Facts Language: French is the official language of Niger and is widely spoken. Passport/Visa: Currency: Electricity: Electrical current is 220 volts, 50Hz. Two-pinned plugs with round pins are standard. Travel guide by wordtravels.com © Globe Media Ltd. By its very nature much of the information in this travel guide is subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they're relying with the relevant authorities. Travmarket cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Event details can change. Please check with the organizers that an event is happening before making travel arrangements. We cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Page 1/7 Niger Destination Guide Travel to Niger Climate in Niger Health Notes when travelling to Niger Safety Notes when travelling to Niger Customs in Niger Duty Free in Niger Doing Business in Niger Communication in Niger Tipping in Niger Passport/Visa Note Entry Requirements Entry requirements for Americans: Entry requirements for Canadians: Entry requirements for UK nationals: Entry requirements for Australians: Entry requirements for Irish nationals: Entry requirements for New Zealanders: Entry requirements for South Africans: Travel guide by wordtravels.com © Globe Media Ltd. By its very nature much of the information in this travel guide is subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they're relying with the relevant authorities. Travmarket cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Event details can change. Please check with the organizers that an event is happening before making travel arrangements. We cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Page 2/7 Niger Destination Guide Page 3/7 Niger Destination Guide Niger Embassies In the United States: In the United Kingdom: In South Africa: Foreign Embassies in Niger American Embassy Canadian Embassy British Embassy Australian Embassy Irish Embassy South African Embassy Page 4/7 Niger Destination Guide Currency Page 5/7 Niger Destination Guide Overview of the Attractions in Niger Page 6/7 Niger Destination Guide Public Holidays in Niger 2020 2021 Birth of the Prophet Thu. October 28 to Fri. October 29 Mon. October 18 to Tue. October 19 Muharram (Islamic New Year) Thu. August 19 to Fri. August 20 Mon. August 9 to Tue. August 10 Lailatoul-Quadr (Night of Power) Wed. May 19 Sat. May 8 New Year's Day Fri. January 1 Fri. January 1 Easter Monday Tue. April 13 Mon. April 5 Concord Day Sat. April 24 Sat. April 24 Labour Day Sat. May 1 Sat. May 1 Eid al-Fitr (End of Ramadan) Mon. May 24 Thu. May 13 Independence Day Tue. August 3 Tue. August 3 Tabaski (Feast of the Sacrifice) Fri. July 30 to Tue. August 3 Mon. July 19 to Fri. July 23 Republic Day Sat. December 18 Sat. December 18 Christmas Day Sat. December 25 Sat. December 25 Page 7/7 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org).
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  • Tuareg Music and Capitalist Reckonings in Niger a Dissertation Submitted
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Rhythms of Value: Tuareg Music and Capitalist Reckonings in Niger A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnomusicology by Eric James Schmidt 2018 © Copyright by Eric James Schmidt 2018 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Rhythms of Value: Tuareg Music and Capitalist Reckonings in Niger by Eric James Schmidt Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnomusicology University of California, Los Angeles, 2018 Professor Timothy D. Taylor, Chair This dissertation examines how Tuareg people in Niger use music to reckon with their increasing but incomplete entanglement in global neoliberal capitalism. I argue that a variety of social actors—Tuareg musicians, fans, festival organizers, and government officials, as well as music producers from Europe and North America—have come to regard Tuareg music as a resource by which to realize economic, political, and other social ambitions. Such treatment of culture-as-resource is intimately linked to the global expansion of neoliberal capitalism, which has led individual and collective subjects around the world to take on a more entrepreneurial nature by exploiting representations of their identities for a variety of ends. While Tuareg collective identity has strongly been tied to an economy of pastoralism and caravan trade, the contemporary moment demands a reimagining of what it means to be, and to survive as, Tuareg. Since the 1970s, cycles of drought, entrenched poverty, and periodic conflicts have pushed more and more Tuaregs to pursue wage labor in cities across northwestern Africa or to work as trans- ii Saharan smugglers; meanwhile, tourism expanded from the 1980s into one of the region’s biggest industries by drawing on pastoralist skills while capitalizing on strategic essentialisms of Tuareg culture and identity.
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  • Insert Country Name Here
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  • CAPSTONE 20-2 Africa Field Study Trip Book Part II
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  • The World Factbook
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  • Niger a Country Profile
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