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Back MatterSource: The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Sep., 1985), pp. i-iiPublished by: Cambridge University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/160676 .
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Modern African Studies, 23, 3 (i)
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CAMBRIDGE -
Marrying Well Marriage, Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos KRISTIN MANN
This pioneering work investigates the history of marriage among the educated elite in colonial Lagos. Building on a wealth of archival and oral evidence, it analyses the far-reaching economic, political and social changes that produced the elite and shaped its subsequent development. African Studies Series 47 204pp. 0521307015 ?22.50 net
Space, Text and Gender An Anthropological Study of the Marakwet of Kenya HENRIETTA MOORE
As well as being the first major anthropological study of the Marakwet, Space, Text and Gender strikingly illustrates how the idea of a cultural text can aid the analysis of enthnographic material. Dr Moore focuses in particular on the relationship between the organisation of household space and gender relations, and on the ways that relationship is changing as a result of wage labour and education. 227pp. 052130333 8 &25.00 net
Population and Development Projects in Africa Edited by JOHN I. CLARKE, MUSTAFA M. KHOGALI and LESZEK A. KOSINSKI
This wide ranging volume discusses the problems of relating development goals to their potential impact on populations and population change. The specific areas under consideration are Mozambique, Zambia, South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia and Sunad.
345pp. 0521305276 ?30.00net
Law, Custom and Social Order The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia
MARTIN CHANOCK
Martin Chanock explores the historical formation of customary law, treating its emergence as part of the history of the social and economic transformation of African societies under colonial rule. The book thus shows how African ideas, aspirations and activities regarding law were shaped by interaction with the legal ideas of the British colonisers, their understanding of African societies, and the judicial institutions of the colonial state.
352pp. 0521301378 &25.00 net African Studies Series 45
Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 2RU, England
(ii)
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THE JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES
The Journal offers a quarterly survey of politics, economics, and related topics in contemporary Africa.
The main emphasis is upon the peoples and policies, the problems and progress of this dynamic and disparate continent; upon the many societies that are evolving rather than the essential characteristics of the old; upon the present, not on the more distant past. The best current work is sought from specialists in different academic disciplines, whose contributions can illuminate and cross-fertilise one another.
The Journal seeks to promote a deeper understanding of what is happening in Africa today. It is intended for both the political scientist and the practical politician, the administrator and the advocate, the economist and the educator, the banker and the business man, the diplomat and the technocrat, the civil servant and the nationalist leader. All have something to contribute to these pages and, it is hoped, much to learn from them.
Editorial policy avoids commitment to any political viewpoint or ideology, whether imperialism, pan-Africanism, capitalism, socialism, or nationalism. Such concepts, however, have relevance to the modern African situation, and merit serious discussion, often from several different points of view, in order that controversial issues may be fairly examined.
? Cambridge University Press 1985
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For all other use, permission should be sought from Cambridge or the American Branch of Cambridge University Press.
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CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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? Cambridge University Press 1985
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