535 research outputs found
European Trade Beads in Southern Africa
European Trade Beads In Southern Africa, By David Killick (1987, 10:3-9
The everyday economy: introduction
This introduction to the Everyday Economy collection provides a brief summary of the concept as advanced by Julie Froud, Karel Williams and their collaborators at Manchester’s Centre for Research in Socio-Cultural Change, followed by an overview of articles by Anna Coote, Tess Lanning and Rachel Laurence, Alex Colás and Jason Edwards, David Edgerton, Christine Berry, Luke Raikes and Anna Killick
A prey on normal people: C. Killick Millard and the euthanasia movement in Great Britain, 1930-55
Examines the contribution of English public health activist C. Killick Millard to the euthanasia movement. Implications of the legislative decisions on the right to die; Contribution of the early twentieth-century Unitarians to humanism; Reaffirmation of the Christian messages of compassion.; Examines the contribution of English public health activist C. Killick Millard to the euthanasia movement. Implications of the legislative decisions on the right to die; Contribution of the early twentieth-century Unitarians to humanism; Reaffirmation of the Christian messages of compassion
Alastair Northedge, Andrina Bamber and Michael Roah with contributions by Dr. Bahija Isma'il, J.A. Black, Robert Killick, Michael Charles et David Kennedy, Excavations at 'Āna. Qat'a Island., (Iraq Archaeological reports - 1)
Leriche Pierre. Alastair Northedge, Andrina Bamber and Michael Roah with contributions by Dr. Bahija Isma'il, J.A. Black, Robert Killick, Michael Charles et David Kennedy, Excavations at 'Āna. Qat'a Island., (Iraq Archaeological reports - 1). In: Syria. Tome 71 fascicule 1-2, 1994. pp. 236-237
LIA data from rectangular and fishtail ingots.
Ingot data is compared to geological ore data from the Central African Copperbelt. The geological data is comprised of ore samples from the Domes Region, Kafue Syncline, Katanga Core, Katanga Copperbelt, Kundelungu Plateau, and Zambian Copperbelt–all of which are genetically related. Ore data in the S3 Appendix from compilation of Killick et al. [59] and data produced by Stephens in 2020.</p
International development in transition
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: HARMAN, S. and WILLIAMS, D. (2014), International development in transition. International Affairs, 90: 925–941. doi: 10.1111/1468-2346.12148, which has been published in final form at http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2346.12148International development is in a period of transition. While the outcome of this is still unclear, this article argues that there are at least four areas in which the project of international development is changing. First, there is a debate, especially within the World Bank, about development strategy and how we think about development, particularly in terms of the balance between states and markets. This is evident in the debate over state failure and the new structural economics. Second, there is increasing evidence of a shift in lending, away from projects of 'small' human development, perhaps best encapsulated by the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, towards more transformative 'big' development projects such as infrastructure. Third, 'non-traditional' aid donors and new forms of private philanthropy are playing a more significant role in development financing and this, in turn, offers developing countries a new range of choices about what kinds of development assistance they receive. Fourth, aid relations are changing as a result of the renewed agency of developing states, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, and shifts towards increased South-South cooperation are growing as evidenced by increased funding from regional development banks and increased trade flows. The article reviews these changes and suggests a series of questions and challenges that arise from them for analysts of international development, developing countries and traditional aid donors. © 2014 The Royal Institute of International Affairs
Locations of prehistorically exploited mines in southern Africa.
For location and discussion of these mines, see Bisson [2], Chirikure [10], Evers and van der Berg [5], Friede [11], Hammel et al. [12], Herbert [1], Huffman et al. [13], Killick et al. [14], Mason [15], Miller [16], Miller and Sandelowsky [17], Molyneux and Reinecke [18], Phimster [19], Summers [6], Swan [8], Van Waarden [7]. For a geological legend to the map, see Fig C in the S1 Appendix. (Geological basemap adapted from Thiéblemont et al. [20]).</p
kellick
killick n'Let 1 out wi' th' "kellick."' author footnotes "kellick" : "The local name for the stone used as an anchor in fishing boats." term is used in dialect sketch concerning an evening's fishing at Lyme Regis, Dorset.Used I and SupUsed I and SupUsed Supcillick, kellick, killock, lose your killick, and [you'll] find it in the fall, have a rock in one's killick, killick-claw, killick-rod, killick-stone, keel-log, kellock, keylock, GRANNY 2Checked by Raji Sreeni on Fri 10 Jul 201
LIA data from <i>croisette</i> ingots.
Comparison of HIH and HXR ingot LIA data to geological ore LIA data from the Central African Copperbelt and Magondi belt. Ore data in the S3 Appendix from compilation of Killick et al. [59] and data produced by Stephens in 2020. The Kent Estates HXR ingot clearly diverges from the dominant trend in Copperbelt LIA values and is a better match for the Magondi belt. However, more isotopic measurements of Magondi belt ore samples are needed to better define this trend line, and to investigate whether individual ore deposits within this mining district can be distinguished.</p
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