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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV039981771
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    Content: The Burundi collection provides historical, cultural and economic information on Burundi culture and society, circa 1907-1998. Documents that discuss the colonial period cover important themes including physical geography and material culture, ethnicity and social structure, law and custom, and gender roles and cultural ideals. Other documents deal with political processes and important historical events in the post independence period including the politics of genocide in the Great Lakes region. This includes R. Lemarchand's analysis of the genocide of Hutu by Tutsi in Burundi (1972), of Tutsi and Hutu by Hutu in Rwanda (1994) and of Hutu by Tutsi in Congo (1996-1997). Also included is a book by a professional anthropologist who lived among Burundian Hutu refugees in Tanzania. Malkki focuses on the ways the displacement of these Hutu refugees led to the creation of "essentialist" ethnic identities and the horrible violence generated both in Burundi and neighboring countries
    Note: The Barundi: an ethnological study of German East Africa - Hans Meyer - 1916 -- - The structure of the Barundi community: (Ruanda-Urundi Territory, Central Africa) - George Smets - 1946 -- - The study of native court records as a method of ethnological inquiry - R DeZ. Hall - 1938 -- - Culture Summary: Barundi - Albert Trouwborst - 2010 -- - Women of Burundi: a study of social values - Ethel M. Albert - 1963 -- - Purity and exile: violence, memory, and national cosmology among Hutu refugees in Tanzania - Liisa H. Malkki - 1995 -- - Genocide in the Great Lakes: which genocide? whose genocide? - RenT Lemarchand - 1998
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology
    RVK:
    Keywords: Burundi
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_68957293X
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    Content: The Burundi collection provides historical, cultural and economic information on Burundi culture and society, circa 1907-1998. Documents that discuss the colonial period cover important themes including physical geography and material culture, ethnicity and social structure, law and custom, and gender roles and cultural ideals. Other documents deal with political processes and important historical events in the post independence period including the politics of genocide in the Great Lakes region. This includes R. Lemarchands analysis of the genocide of Hutu by Tutsi in Burundi (1972), of Tutsi and Hutu by Hutu in Rwanda (1994) and of Hutu by Tutsi in Congo (1996-1997). Also included is a book by a professional anthropologist who lived among Burundian Hutu refugees in Tanzania. Malkki focuses on the ways the displacement of these Hutu refugees led to the creation of "essentialist" ethnic identities and the horrible violence generated both in Burundi and neighboring countries
    Note: an ethnological study of German East Africa - Hans Meyer - 1916 -- - The structure of the Barundi community: (Ruanda-Urundi Territory, Central Africa) - George Smets - 1946 -- - The study of native court records as a method of ethnological inquiry - R DeZ. Hall - 1938 -- - Culture Summary: Barundi - Albert Trouwborst - 2010 -- - Women of Burundi: a study of social values - Ethel M. Albert - 1963 -- - Purity and exile: violence, memory, and national cosmology among Hutu refugees in Tanzania - Liisa H. Malkki - 1995 -- - Genocide in the Great Lakes: which genocide? whose genocide? - RenT Lemarchand - 1998
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_894307517
    Format: 1 online resource (187 pages)
    ISBN: 9781464809392
    Content: Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Foreword -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- A crisis that can be managed -- Working together with humanitarian actors -- At the onset-Taking a new look at prevention and preparedness -- During the crisis-Managing changes for host communities -- During the crisis-Reducing vulnerabilities of the forcibly displaced -- Toward a longer-term solution-Helping to rebuild lives -- Making the most of development finance -- Notes -- 1 How Severe Is the Crisis? -- The crisis in perspective -- Some unexpected characteristics of the crisis -- Insufficient data -- An agenda for better data -- Annex 1A -- Annex 1B -- Notes -- 2 Taking a New Look at Prevention and Preparedness -- To stay or not to stay? Weighing the risks -- What makes people go? -- There is often time to prepare before the crisis -- What happens to those who stay behind? -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 3 Managing Changes for Host Communities -- Initial conditions, shock, and response -- Exacerbating existing challenges: The country-level impact on fragility, social cohesion, and the economy -- Some gain, others lose: Local impacts on jobs and prices -- Strains on local capacity for service delivery -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 4 Reducing the Vulnerabilities of the Forcibly Displaced -- The initial setback: Losses and trauma -- The environment for recovery: Rights, location, and planning horizon -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 5 Rebuilding Lives -- Stay, return, or move on? -- From return to successful return -- Integration in host countries: Location vs. rights -- Integration in high-income countries: A difficult endeavor -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 6 Making the Most of Development Finance -- The main elements of a major international effort.
    Content: The potential for development financing: Maximizing the use of public resources -- The potential for development financing: Leveraging private capital and expertise -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Boxes -- 1.1 Lessons from economic migration -- 1.2 People move for different reasons -- 1.3 Comparing shares-refugees and economic migrants -- 1.4 Norway has 18,000 refugees or is it 132,000? -- 1.5 The challenges of data collection for IDPs -- 1.6 Estimating the number of affected "hosts" -- 1.7 Another group of concern: Stateless people -- 1.8 Institutionalizing data collection -- 1.9 Open data -- 2.1 A brief overview of the forced displacement prevention agenda -- 2.2 The (imperfect) targeting of violence -- 2.3 Socioeconomic status and displacement strategies -- 2.4 Mixed migration -- 2.5 Socioeconomic impact of forced displacement on countries of origin: How to quantify it? -- 2.6 Using big data to predict economic migration to Australia -- 2.7 Learning from disaster preparedness -- 2.8 Migration and development -- 2.9 Strengthening resilience in Ethiopia -- 3.1 A host country perspective -- 3.2 Terrorism and the displaced-Myths and reality -- 3.3 What is "social cohesion"? -- 3.4 Perceptions and social cohesion -- 3.5 Forced displacement and crime -- 3.6 Refugees as employers in Turkey -- 3.7 The impact of Cuban refugees on Miami's labor market -- 3.8 Camps or country systems? -- 3.9 Regional development -- 3.10 Support for formalizing Syrian refugees in Jordan -- 4.1 Trauma and the displaced: An example from Syria -- 4.2 Institutions -- 4.3 Women, business, and the law -- 4.4 The "Wilton Park Principles"? -- 4.5 Special economic zones in Jordan -- 4.6 Providing education to Syrian refugees in Turkey -- 4.7 Forced displacement and the graduation approach -- 4.8 Supporting psychosocial and post-traumatic care?
    Content: 5.1 An approach based on specific vulnerabilities -- 5.2 The complexities of return and reintegration -- 5.3 From forced displacement to economic migration -- 5.4 Do the forcibly displaced want to return? -- 5.5 The politics of return -- 5.6 Gender and the challenges of return -- 5.7 Return and access to land -- 5.8 Assisting return -- 5.9 Tanzania's integration of Burundians -- 5.10 Does status matter? Lessons from economic migration -- 5.11 ECOW AS and labor migration -- 6.1 In-donor refugee costs -- 6.2 The financing model of development banks -- 6.3 Innovative bonds -- 6.4 Climate investment funds -- 6.5 The World Bank Group Concessional Financing Facility -- 6.6 An example of contingent financing -- 6.7 Guarantees and forced displacement -- 6.8 A precedent: Insurance against natural disasters -- 6.9 Illustrative questions on cost-effectiveness -- 6.10 Exploring new sources of financing -- 6.11 Collective action in providing public goods -- Figures -- O.1 An overview of the forced displacement crisis -- O.2 Shock and response for the host communities -- O.3 The multiple dimensions of vulnerability -- 1.1 A threefold crisis: The global forcibly displaced population -- 1.2 Refugees are only a small share of people on the move -- 1.3 Refugees and IDPs are mainly in low- and middle-income countries -- 1.4 The European Union now has fewer refugees than in the early 1990s -- 1.5 Refugees and IDPs in the world's developing regions -- 1.6 The same 10 conflicts have caused the majority of forced displacement every year since 1991 -- 1.7 Top 15 countries and territories of origin for forced displacement -- 1.8 The same 15 countries have been hosting a majority of refugees every year since 1991 -- 1.9 Refugees typically account for a small share of the host country's population -- 1.10 How many years have refugees spent in exile?
    Content: 1.11 Most refugees live out of camps, and camps are concentrated in Africa and South Asia -- 1.12 The vast majority of IDPs live in individual accommodations -- 1.13 Forced displacement is more urban in middle-income countries, and more rural in low-income countries -- 3.1 Shock and response for the host communities -- 4.1 Number of legal restrictions on women seeking jobs in the 15 largest refugee-hosting countries, 2014 -- 5.1 Exits from UNHCR statistics -- 5.2 Returns of refugees by country -- 5.3 Returns of IDPs by country -- 5.4 Immigrants in selected OECD countries and refugees in key host countries as a share of the total host population -- 5.5 Refugees in high-income countries -- 5.6 Employment rate by immigrant category and duration of stay in European OECD countries, 2008 -- 5.7 Employment by years in Sweden for resettled refugees and approved asylum-seekers, 2007 -- 6.1 Humanitarian assistance -- 6.2 United Nations appeals: Needs and contributions -- 6.3 Share of long-, medium-, and short-term recipients of official humanitarian assistance from OECD-DAC donors -- 6.4 Net ODA expenditures on in-donor refugee costs -- Maps -- O.1 An uneven impact across the world -- 1.1 Main refugee origin countries -- 1.2 Main refugee host countries -- 1.3 Main IDP countries -- Tables -- 1.1 Rating of methodologies -- 1B.1 Forced displacement situations as of end-2015
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781464809385
    Additional Edition: Druck-Ausgabe Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781464809385
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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