Friday, 21 June 2019

A Preliminary Conservation and Development Scheme for Old Massawa: UNESCO 1998


A Preliminary Conservation and Development Scheme for Old Massawa (Eritrea's Oldest Living town) by Ann Pulver and Arnaud  Goujon, UNESCO 1998

According to the document, the town is situated on two coral islands, Massawa and Taulud. A detailed map of the town in 1885 records 5000 inhabitants, 216 masonry houses, 233 huts, 3 main mosques with minarates, 10 secondary mosques, and 22 Arab and European Cafes. In 1888 part of the town was destroyed by fire and on 14 August 1921 most of the town was destroyed by an earthquake.


www.mediafire.com/file/76lgbcyksbscxw5/UNESCO+development+scheme+for+Massawa.pdf

Tuesday, 18 June 2019

WHO was WHO in Eritrea 1952: A Bibliographical Dictionary

WHO was WHO in Eritrea 1952: A Bibliographical Dictionary, in Italian, written by Giuseppe Puglisi

A note on the book, in English, by Jonathan Miran:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/jcsjtyaubdxx7bw/Biography_and_History_in_Giuseppe_Pugli+Che+del+Eritrea.pdf
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Introduction by the author in Italian:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/h1oacil716x4zp3/Er_Who+is+who_corr_Part+Intro.pdf

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Part I:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/yb2840j4dbb5h1v/Er_Who_s+who+in+Eritrea+1952+part+I.pdf

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Part II

http://www.mediafire.com/file/t7897nlrjogn5nf/Er_Who+is+Who+in+Eritrea+Part+2.pdf

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Part III

http://www.mediafire.com/file/jvktf6kru3y9pt1/Er_Who+is+who_corr_Part+3.pdf

Part IV: Missing so far

Land Reform Policies in Botswana, Eritrea, Zimbabwe

CHALLENGES IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF LAND REFORM POLICIES IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA. A Comparative Study of Botswana, Eritrea, and Zimbabwe, a 2012 M.A thesis by Samuel Opono , Linnaeus University, School of Social Sciences                                                                                         

http://lnu.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:558457/FULLTEXT01.pdf

Im/Mobility: Homeland, Identity and Well being Amongst the Beni-Amer in Eritrea-Sudan and Diaspora


Im/Mobility: Homeland, Identity and Well being Amongst the Beni-Amer in Eritrea-Sudan and Diaspora, a 2017 PhD Thesis at the University of Leicester, by Saeid Hmmed

إمكانية التنقل :الوطن والهوية والرفاهية  في أوساط البني عامر في إريتريا والسودان والشتات
رسالة دكتورة  بقلم سعيد همد 2017  


This thesis focuses on how mobility, identity, conceptions of homeland and wellbeing have been transformed across time and space amongst the Beni-Amer. Beni-Amer pastoralist societies inhabit western Eritrea and eastern Sudan; their livelihoods are intimately connected to livestock. Their cultural identities, norms and values, and their indigenous knowledge, have revolved around pastoralism. Since the 1950s the Beni-Amer have undergone rapid and profound socio-political and geographic change. In the 1950s the tribe left most of their ancestral homeland and migrated to Sudan; many now live in diasporas in Western and Middle Eastern countries. Their mobility, and conceptions of homeland, identity and wellbeing are complex, mutually constitutive and cannot be easily untangled. The presence or absence, alteration or limitation of one of these concepts affects the others. Qualitatively designed and thematically analysed, this study focuses on the multiple temporalities and spatialities of Beni-Amer societies.  

http://www.mediafire.com/file/0ci5br12gf13w3o/Mobility+Beni+Amer+Eritrea+Sudan+2018.pdf