Zambia

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AN ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND HIV PREVALENCE IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Authors Paul Henry Brodish
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Biosocial Science
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1 Journal Article

The Structural Adjustment of Football in Zambia: Politics, Decline and Dispersal, 1991-1994

Authors Hikabwa D. Chipande
Year 2016
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT
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4 Journal Article

Immigrants and Development in Zambia

Authors Patrick O. Ohadike
Year 1974
Journal Name International Migration Review
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6 Journal Article

Spontaneously Settled Refugees in Northwestern Province, Zambia

Authors Paul J. Freund, Katele Kalumba
Year 1986
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 7
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9 Journal Article

Uncovering local perspectives on humanitarian assistance and its outcomes

Authors O Bakewell
Year 2000
Journal Name Disasters
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10 Journal Article

Refugee Dynamics: Angolans in Zambia 1966 to 1972

Authors Art Hansen
Year 1981
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 18
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12 Journal Article

MANAGING REFUGEES - ZAMBIA RESPONSE TO ANGOLAN REFUGEES 1966-1977

Authors A HANSEN
Year 1979
Journal Name Disasters
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14 Journal Article

Process Tracing the Policy Impact of ‘Indicators’

Authors D. J. H. te Lintelo, T. Munslow, K. Pittore, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name The European Journal of Development Research
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15 Journal Article

Notes on the socio-economic and cultural factors influencing the transmission of HIV in Botswana

Authors DS Macdonald
Year 1996
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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18 Journal Article

People Know What They Need. An Interview with Women Activists in Zambia

Authors Zuzana Uhde, Tomáš Tožička
Year 2015
Journal Name Gender a výzkum / Gender and Research
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19 Journal Article

Repatriation and Self-Settled Refugees in Zambia: Bringing Solutions to the Wrong Problems

Authors O. BAKEWELL
Year 2000
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
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22 Journal Article

Voluntary medical male circumcision and HIV in Zambia: expectations and observations

Authors Michel Garenne, Alan Matthews
Year 2020
Journal Name JOURNAL OF BIOSOCIAL SCIENCE
Citations (WoS) 12
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23 Journal Article

Country Monographs: Post-Apartheid South Africa

Authors Bernard Mbenga, Ishmael Kalule-Sabiti, Acheampong Yaw Amoateng, ...
Book Title Citizenship, Belonging and Intergenerational Relations in African Migration
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28 Book Chapter

Gender and exceptionality in North-South interventions: Reflecting on relations

Authors B Heron
Year 2004
Journal Name Journal of Gender Studies
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33 Journal Article

Ethnicity, politics and Zambian youth

Authors Derek Roberts, Simusa Silwamba
Year 2017
Journal Name Contemporary Social Science
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34 Journal Article

Refugee Repatriation and Local Politics in Angola: Conflict and Creativity Following the Return of Chiefs and Party Functionaries

Principal investigator Katharina Inhetveen (Principal Investigator), Martin Sökefeld (Principal Investigator)
Description
Migration and return migration are challenging phenomena of creativity and adaptation, both in past and contemporary Africa. They cause changes in local structures and induce conflicts, which propel further cycles of adaptation and creativity by locals and migrants.The project focuses on the political dimension of such changes by analyzing the case of returning Angolan refugees after years or decades in Zambian refugee camps. More specifically, it studies the return of refugees who held political positions prior to their flight from Angola, either as neo-traditional chiefs or as functionaries of the UNITA party/rebel group. The project addresses a twofold question. Firstly, it is asked what kinds of repercussions are invoked by the return of such refugees and their re-immersion into the local political structures which will have changed during their years of absence. What kind of political order emerges from the interaction between returned political leaders and those who stayed? Secondly, it is asked how this new political order is influenced by the experiences of the returnees during their time as camp refugees. In particular, the project will examine the influence, if any, of their exposure to the international refugee regime, which propagates humanitarian and democratic values (often seen as Western values) in the camps. Has this experience shaped the new political engagement in Angola of local leaders, who have returned after staying in the refugee camps of Zambia?
Year 2011
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38 Project

Trends, Determinants and Health Risks of Adolescent Fatherhood in Sub-Saharan Africa

Authors Emmanuel O. Amoo, Angie Igbinoba, David Imhonopi, ...
Year 1970
Journal Name Ethiopian Journal of Health Sciences
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44 Journal Article

Clinical Officer Surgical Training in Africa

Description
Obstetrical and abdominal emergencies, and trauma, much of it affecting children, represent a major and neglected part of Africa’s burden of disease. Countries cannot train and retain sufficient specialist surgeons (doctors) to address these priorities. We propose a surgical training intervention targeted at Clinical officers (COs), who are trained non-physician clinicians that form the backbone of Africa’s district hospital services. Lacking medical degrees, COs have fewer opportunities for emigration. Surgical training of non-clinician physicians has been tried and reportedly worked well in African countries. It has never been rigorously evaluated, nor been subject to economic and population impact assessments. Two different 2 year training models are proposed: district hospital in-service training in Malawi and centralised training in Zambia. Before-and-after and randomized controlled trial evaluations are planned. The latter is the strongest study design for evaluating an intervention. Outcomes will include direct health benefits to patients, including morbidity and mortality averted; improved provider knowledge, skills and performance; direct (surgical) and indirect (management and other services) improvements in district hospital performance. Cost-effectiveness analyses and population impact assessments will be conducted. Clinical Officer training has for long been a feasible and acceptable model to African national policy makers; and COST-Africa has already elicited high level expressions of support. There will be an ongoing interaction with national stakeholders in both countries to ensure attractive career paths, salaries and retention strategies are in place for the graduates. A proven model for training and retaining a new cadre of non-physician surgical officers has the potential to provide a standard of life-saving surgical care often denied to African populations; tackle major rural:urban inequities; and transform district hospital care. Without such a resource, Africa has no hope of reaching MDG 5 on maternal mortality; and reduced hope for MDG 4 on childhood mortality.
Year 2011
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47 Project
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