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  • Skoggard, Ian  (11)
  • New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (11)
  • Leiden : Brill
  • Paris : OECD Publishing
  • Ethnology  (11)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians ; Yuki ; Yuki
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Note: Culture summary: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 -- , - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Description / Table of Contents: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 --^
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Yuki Indians
    Abstract: ^^ - Whatever happened to the Yuki? - Virginia P. Miller - 1975 -- - Yuki, Huchnom, and Coast Yuki - Virginia P. Miller - 1978 -- - The Yú-ki - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - An archaeological survey of the Yuki area - by A. E. Treganza, C. E. Smith and W. D. Weymouth - 1950 -- - Tá-tu - Stephen Powers - 1976 -- - Bibliography - 1978
    Abstract: The Yuki lived in northern Mendocino County, California and spoke a language, Yukian, that has no known relationship to other languages. The Yuki include the Coast Yuki, Yuki, and Huchnom. In the 1990s there were about 100 Yukis around Round Valley, California. The Yuki used to practice hunting, gathering, and fishing and the Round Valley supported a relatively dense population on the rich wild resources. However, the Round Valley land was much desired by European-American settlers and the Yuki were displaced and killed to free up the land. There are eighteen documents in this collection. A general introduction to the three main Yuki groups can be found in Kroeber's articles from the Handbook of Californian Indians
    Description / Table of Contents: Yuki - Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - Some plants used by the Yuki Indians of Round Valley, northern California - by L.S.M. Curtin ; historical review and photos by Margaret C. Irwin - 1957 -- - A summary of Yuki culture - by George M. Foster - 1944 -- - The Coast Yuki - by E. W. Gifford - 1965 -- - Coast Yuki myths - By E. W. Gifford - 1937 -- - War stories from two enemy tribes - By Walter Goldschmidt, George Foster, and Frank Essene - 1939 -- - The Yuki: ethnic geography - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: culture - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Yuki: religion - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - The Huchnom and Coast Yuki - By A. L. Kroeber - 1972 -- - Yuki myths - by A. L. Kroeber - 1932 -- - The changing role of the chief on a California Indian Reservation - Virginia P. Miller - 1989 -- - Ukomno'm: the Yuki Indians of northern California - by Virginia P. Miller - 1979 --^
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mbundu (African people) ; Mbundu ; Mbundu
    Abstract: The Ovimbundu live in the Benguela Highlands (Bié Plateau) of Angola. They are agricultural and the villages are moved when the soil is exhausted. This file contains 12 documents and the time range of the information is from 1600-1997. Ethnographies are included as well as a collection of Ovimbundu folktales; information on the history of the Wambu Kingdom; cultural history and political economy from the early contact period up to the civil war (2000); the Bailunda War (1902-4); magic, spiritual beliefs, divination and curing practices; and social and economic change resulting from the colonial encounter
    Note: Culture summary: Ovimbundu - Ian Skoggard - 2002 -- - Umbundu kinship & character: being a description of social structure and individual development of the Ovimbundu of Angola, with observations concerning the bearing on the enterprise of Christian missions of certain phases of the life and culture described - Gladwyn Murray Childs - 1949 -- - The Ovimbundu of Angola - Merran McCulloch - 1952 -- - The Ovimbundu of Angola: Frederick H. Rawson-Field Museum ethnological expedition to West Africa, 1929-30. ; 84 plates in photogravure and 1 map - by Wilfrid D. Hambly - 1934 -- - The Ocimbanda, or witch-doctor of the Ovimbundu of Portuguese southwest Africa - George A. Dorsey - 1899 -- - Occupational ritual, belief, and custom among the Ovimbundu - By Wilfrid Dyson Hambly - 1934 -- , - The Ovimbundu under two sovereignities: a study of social control and social change among a people of Angola - Adrian C. Edwards - 1962 -- - Umbundu: folk tales from Angola - collected and translated by Merlin Ennis ; comparative analysis by Albert B. Lord - 1962 -- - Production, trade and power: the political economy of central Angola - by Linda Marinda Heywood - 1984 [1999 copy] -- - Contested power in Angola: 1840s to the present - by Linda Heywood - 2000 -- - The kingdom of Wambu (Huambo): a tentative chronology - By Gladwin M. Childs - 1964 -- - To rise with one mind: the Bailund War of 1902 - Douglas C. Wheeler and C. Diane Christensen - [1973] -- - Interrelations between economic and social change in rural Africa: the case of the Ovimbundu of Angola - Hermann Pössinger - [1973]
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mbundu (African people)
    Abstract: The Ovimbundu live in the Benguela Highlands (Bíe Plateau) of Angola. They are agricultural and the villages are moved when the soil is exhausted. This file contains 12 documents and the time range of the information is from 1600-1997. Ethnographies are included as well as a collection of Ovimbundu folktales; information on the history of the Wambu Kingdom; cultural history and political economy from the early contact period up to the civil war (2000); the Bailunda War (1902-4); magic, spiritual beliefs, divination and curing practices; and social and economic change resulting from the colonial encounter
    Description / Table of Contents: Ovimbundu - Ian Skoggard - 2002 -- - Umbundu kinship & character: being a description of social structure and individual development of the Ovimbundu of Angola, with observations concerning the bearing on the enterprise of Christian missions of certain phases of the life and culture described - Gladwyn Murray Childs - 1949 -- - The Ovimbundu of Angola - Merran McCulloch - 1952 -- - The Ovimbundu of Angola: Frederick H. Rawson-Field Museum ethnological expedition to West Africa, 1929-30. ; 84 plates in photogravure and 1 map - by Wilfrid D. Hambly - 1934 -- - The Ocimbanda, or witch-doctor of the Ovimbundu of Portuguese southwest Africa - George A. Dorsey - 1899 -- - Occupational ritual, belief, and custom among the Ovimbundu - By Wilfrid Dyson Hambly - 1934 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study of social control and social change among a people of Angola - Adrian C. Edwards - 1962 -- - Umbundu: folk tales from Angola - collected and translated by Merlin Ennis ; comparative analysis by Albert B. Lord - 1962 -- - Production, trade and power: the political economy of central Angola - by Linda Marinda Heywood - 1984 [1999 copy] -- - Contested power in Angola: 1840s to the present - by Linda Heywood - 2000 -- - The kingdom of Wambu (Huambo): a tentative chronology - By Gladwin M. Childs - 1964 -- - To rise with one mind: the Bailund War of 1902 - Douglas C. Wheeler and C. Diane Christensen - [1973] -- - Interrelations between economic and social change in rural Africa: the case of the Ovimbundu of Angola - Hermann Pössinger - [1973]
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Mbundu (African people)
    Abstract: The Ovimbundu live in the Benguela Highlands (Bíe Plateau) of Angola. They are agricultural and the villages are moved when the soil is exhausted. This file contains 12 documents and the time range of the information is from 1600-1997. Ethnographies are included as well as a collection of Ovimbundu folktales; information on the history of the Wambu Kingdom; cultural history and political economy from the early contact period up to the civil war (2000); the Bailunda War (1902-4); magic, spiritual beliefs, divination and curing practices; and social and economic change resulting from the colonial encounter
    Description / Table of Contents: Ovimbundu - Ian Skoggard - 2002 -- - Umbundu kinship & character: being a description of social structure and individual development of the Ovimbundu of Angola, with observations concerning the bearing on the enterprise of Christian missions of certain phases of the life and culture described - Gladwyn Murray Childs - 1949 -- - The Ovimbundu of Angola - Merran McCulloch - 1952 -- - The Ovimbundu of Angola: Frederick H. Rawson-Field Museum ethnological expedition to West Africa, 1929-30. ; 84 plates in photogravure and 1 map - by Wilfrid D. Hambly - 1934 -- - The Ocimbanda, or witch-doctor of the Ovimbundu of Portuguese southwest Africa - George A. Dorsey - 1899 -- - Occupational ritual, belief, and custom among the Ovimbundu - By Wilfrid Dyson Hambly - 1934 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a study of social control and social change among a people of Angola - Adrian C. Edwards - 1962 -- - Umbundu: folk tales from Angola - collected and translated by Merlin Ennis ; comparative analysis by Albert B. Lord - 1962 -- - Production, trade and power: the political economy of central Angola - by Linda Marinda Heywood - 1984 [1999 copy] -- - Contested power in Angola: 1840s to the present - by Linda Heywood - 2000 -- - The kingdom of Wambu (Huambo): a tentative chronology - By Gladwin M. Childs - 1964 -- - To rise with one mind: the Bailund War of 1902 - Douglas C. Wheeler and C. Diane Christensen - [1973] -- - Interrelations between economic and social change in rural Africa: the case of the Ovimbundu of Angola - Hermann Pössinger - [1973]
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology--Malawi ; Tsonga ; Tsonga
    Abstract: The Lakeshore Tonga live on the western shore of Lake Malawi between Nkhata Bay and the Luweya River in the Northern Province of the Republic of Malawi. They are a heterogeneous people formed from at least four different groups who settled the area in the late 18th century. The Tonga of Malawi are distinct from the people of the same name who live in Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Mozambique. There are six documents in the file, five of them by the ethnographer van Velsen. Of particular note is the ethnography, Politics of Kinship. It includes detailed, situational analysis of power relations within and between kin groups and villages, and the strategies Tonga leaders employ in their quest for power. The other four works by Van Velsen are articles that look specifically at Tonga labor migration, oral history prior to British contact, and the histories of British missionaries and administration. Douglas has written a very brief description of Tonga traditional religion, history, economy, and social organization
    Note: Culture summary: Lakeshore Tonga - Ian Skoggard - 2001 -- - The politics of kinship: a study in social manipulation among the lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1964 -- - The missionary factor among the Lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1960 -- - Notes on the history of the Lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1959 -- - The establishment of the administration in Tongaland - by J. van Velsen - 1962 -- - Labour migration as a positive factor in the continuity of Tonga tribal society - J. van Velsen - 1961 -- - North-west Nyasa-Lundazi region: Tumbuka and Lake Shore Tonga - By Mary Tew - 1950
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology--Malawi
    Abstract: The Lakeshore Tonga live on the western shore of Lake Malawi between Nkhata Bay and the Luweya River in the Northern Province of the Republic of Malawi. They are a heterogeneous people formed from at least four different groups who settled the area in the late 18th century. The Tonga of Malawi are distinct from the people of the same name who live in Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Mozambique. There are six documents in the file, five of them by the ethnographer van Velsen. Of particular note is the ethnography, Politics of Kinship. It includes detailed, situational analysis of power relations within and between kin groups and villages, and the strategies Tonga leaders employ in their quest for power. The other four works by Van Velsen are articles that look specifically at Tonga labor migration, oral history prior to British contact, and the histories of British missionaries and administration. Douglas has written a very brief description of Tonga traditional religion, history, economy, and social organization
    Description / Table of Contents: Lakeshore Tonga - Ian Skoggard - 2001 -- - The politics of kinship: a study in social manipulation among the lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1964 -- - The missionary factor among the Lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1960 -- - Notes on the history of the Lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1959 -- - The establishment of the administration in Tongaland - by J. van Velsen - 1962 -- - Labour migration as a positive factor in the continuity of Tonga tribal society - J. van Velsen - 1961 -- - North-west Nyasa-Lundazi region: Tumbuka and Lake Shore Tonga - By Mary Tew - 1950
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ethnology--Malawi
    Abstract: The Lakeshore Tonga live on the western shore of Lake Malawi between Nkhata Bay and the Luweya River in the Northern Province of the Republic of Malawi. They are a heterogeneous people formed from at least four different groups who settled the area in the late 18th century. The Tonga of Malawi are distinct from the people of the same name who live in Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Mozambique. There are six documents in the file, five of them by the ethnographer van Velsen. Of particular note is the ethnography, Politics of Kinship. It includes detailed, situational analysis of power relations within and between kin groups and villages, and the strategies Tonga leaders employ in their quest for power. The other four works by Van Velsen are articles that look specifically at Tonga labor migration, oral history prior to British contact, and the histories of British missionaries and administration. Douglas has written a very brief description of Tonga traditional religion, history, economy, and social organization
    Description / Table of Contents: Lakeshore Tonga - Ian Skoggard - 2001 -- - The politics of kinship: a study in social manipulation among the lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1964 -- - The missionary factor among the Lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1960 -- - Notes on the history of the Lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland - by J. van Velsen - 1959 -- - The establishment of the administration in Tongaland - by J. van Velsen - 1962 -- - Labour migration as a positive factor in the continuity of Tonga tribal society - J. van Velsen - 1961 -- - North-west Nyasa-Lundazi region: Tumbuka and Lake Shore Tonga - By Mary Tew - 1950
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Arabs--Canada ; Araber ; Araber
    Abstract: Arab Canadians are first-generation Christian or Muslim Arabic-speaking immigrants and their descendants who originally came from the Arab world and have roots in Arabic culture. Arab Canadians can be found throughout Canada, although the largest communities are found in major cities, such as Montreal and Toronto. There are five documents in the Arab Canadians file. The two major works cover the immigrant history, assimilation, and acculturation of Arab Canadians in Canada and Lebanese and Syrian Canadians in Nova Scotia. Three shorter articles examine the changes in Lebanese-Canadian households and families, the persistence of traditional customs in an Edmonton, Alberta Druse community, and a Lebanese community in Lac La Biche, Alberta
    Note: Culture summary: Arab Canadians - Ian Skoggard - 1999 -- - An olive branch on the family tree: the Arabs in Canada - Baha Abu-Laban - 1980 -- - Voyagers to a rocky shore: the Lebanese and Syrians of Nova Scotia - Nancy W. Jabbra and Joseph G. Jabbra - 1984 -- - An Arab community in the Canadian northwest: a preliminary discussion of the Lebanese community in Lac La Biche Alberta - by Harold B. Barclay - 1968 -- - Household and family among Lebanese immigrants in Nova Scotia: continuity, change and adaption - Nancy W. Jabbra - 1991 -- - Reconstituting a Lebanese village society in a Canadian city - Louise E. Sweet - 1974
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  • 11
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Ganda (African people) ; Ganda ; Ganda
    Abstract: The Ganda live in the province of Buganda in Uganda. This file consists of 28 documents with a time range from 1200 to 1991. The studies focus on Baganda history before British overrule (1200-1900), acculturation during the subsequent period of British administration (1901-1961), and various subjects in the contemporary period following independence in 1962. The file includes studies of the traditional system of authority and changes in the system that occurred after 1900. Other studies focus on post-1900 changes in land tenure, status, social mobility, and marriage. Two labor studies examine labor migration under the colonial administration and the assimilation of immigrant laborers in Buganda in the 1950s. Other postwar studies include examinations of political behavior and attitudes, changes in occupational structure, and the effect of the Baganda authority system on innovation and change. Post-Independence studies include an examination of ethnic categories of mental health, infant care and development, and the impact of microtechnologies on rural life
    Note: Culture summary: Ganda - Ian Skoggard - 1998 -- - An African people in the twentieth century - By L. P. Mair - 1934 -- - The Baganda: an account of their native customs and beliefs - By John Roscoe - 1911 -- - Native marriage in Buganda - L. P. Mair - 1940 -- - History of the migration in Uganda - P. G. Powesland - 1954 -- - The assimilation of the immigrants, and the problem for Buganda - A. I. Richards - 1954 -- - The customs of the Baganda - By Sir Apolo Kagwa ; translated by Ernest B. Kalibala ; Edited by May Mandelbaum (Edel) - 1934 -- - The Ganda - A. I. Richards - 1960 -- - Land tenure in Buganda: present day tendencies - A. B. Mukwaya - 1953 -- - The Eastern Lacustrine Bantu (Ganda and Soga) - By Margaret Chave Fallers - 1960 -- - The changing structure of a Ganda village: Kisozi 1892-1952 - by Audrey I. Richards - 1966 -- , - Bureaucracy and chiefship in Buganda: the development of appointive office in the history of Buganda - By Martin Southwold - 1961 -- - The Ganda of Uganda - Martin Southwold ; introduction by James L. Gibbs, Jr. - 1965 -- - The political kingdom in Uganda: a study in bureaucratic nationalism - By David E. Apter - 1967 -- - Culture and mental illness: a study from Uganda - [by] John H. Orley - 1970 -- - Infancy in Uganda: infant care and the growth of love - by Mary D. Salter Ainsworth - 1967 -- - Myth, ritual, and kingship in Buganda - by Benjamin C. Ray - 1991 -- - Sociocultural factors and the early manifestation of sociobility behavior among Baganda infants - Philip L. Kilbride and Janet E. Kilbride - 1974 -- - Microtechnology in rural Buganda - Michael C. Robbins and Philip L. Kilbride - 1987 -- - A history of Buganda from the foundation of the kingdom to 1900 - [by] M. S. M. Semakula Kiwanuka - [1972] -- - The kings of Buganda - by Sir Apolo Kaggwa; translated and edited by M. S. M. Kiwanuka - 1971 -- - The changing economic structure of Buganda - C. C. Wrigley - 1964 -- , - Social stratification in traditional Buganda - L. A. Fallers, assisted by F. K. Kamoga and S. B. K. Musoke - 1964 -- - The modernization of social stratification - L. A. Fallers, assisted by S. Elkan, F. K. Kamoga and S. B. K. Musoke - 1964 -- - Social mobility, traditional and modern - L. A. Fallers, assisted by S. B. K. Musoke - 1964 -- - Leadership, authority and the village community - Martin Southwold - 1964 -- - Authority patterns in traditional Buganda - A. I. Richards - 1964 -- - Traditional values and current political behavior - A. I. Richards - 1964 -- - Leaders, followers and attitudes toward authority - Leonard W. Doob - 1964
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