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Politik der gesellschaftlichen Versöhnung eine theologisch-ethische Untersuchung am Beispiel der Gacaca-Gerichte in RuandaFriese, Sebastian January 2008 (has links)
Zugl. im systematischen Teil geringfügig überarb. Fassung von: Tübingen, Univ., Diss., 2008
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Ruanda und die Nilgiris; ein geographisch-völkerkundlicher vergleich ...Kiendl, Helmut, January 1935 (has links)
Thesis--Hamburg. / Lebenslauf. "Literatur": p. 78-80.
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Women's roles in the 1994 Rwanda genocide and the empowerment of women in the aftermathBlizzard, Sarah Marie. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M. S.)--International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2007. / Dr. Lyn Graybill, Committee Member ; Dr. Molly Cochran, Committee Member ; Dr. Sylvia Maier, Committee Chair.
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Contraintes d'aménagement en région volcanique tropicale la chaîne centrale des Birunga au Rwanda /Jost, Christian, January 1988 (has links)
Th.--Géogr. et aménage.--Strasbourg 1, 1987.
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Clausewitz im Zeitalter der neuen Kriege: der Krieg in Ruanda (1990 - 1994) im Spiegel der "wunderlichen Dreifaltigkeit"Strickmann, Eva January 2005 (has links)
Zugl.: Potsdam, Univ., Magisterarbeit, 2005
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Breaking a Violent Cycle: Human Rights and Governance in Post-Genocide RwandaEarley, Jack 01 January 2016 (has links)
This paper explores the apparent contradiction between Rwanda’s impressive and internationally-recognized development in physical, economic and social conditions largely driven by the Kagame’s administration policies and the pervasive human rights violations also resulting from government policy. The author asks the question whether the nation – two decades removed from the 1994 genocide which resulted in the death of 800,000 people in 100 days – is ready and capable of transitioning to a political system and set of policies that value human rights and economic development equally, and whether that transition would reduce the risk of future unrest and violence.
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Potential for joint management and multiple use of Nyungwe Forest, RwandaNdayambaje, Jean Damascène 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Nyungwe Forest in the South West of Rwanda is surrounded by a dense human
population (350 people/km') which depends on subsistence agriculture and livestock.
Previous reports on the Forest have shown that its survival is threatened by illegal use
of its resources. Participatory rural appraisal was conducted in five Communes next
to the Forest to study the community's perceptions, uses and interests with respect to
access and management of the Forest. Respondents perceived the Forest as a source
of 18 categories of products of which only 14 were said to be of value for the
respondents'livelihoods. Land, timber and minerals (gold) were the priority resources
preferred by more than 55% of the respondents. Other important resources included
fodder/pastures, wooden goods, fuelwood and poles. Fourteen different species were
most preferred for timber, 16 for poles, 45 for medicinal materials and six for wooden
goods. However, the majority of these species were preferred for multiple uses as
timber, poles and medicines.
A forest resource assessment was carried out to identify the stock of the preferred tree
species. Not all woody resources mentioned as being preferred were available, with
some tree species not found at all in the Forest. In order to identify tree species that
can be used sustainably, different criteria including abundance (density), dominance,
diameter size-class distribution and regeneration, were used in combination. Of the
12 tree species recorded in the Forest and most preferred for timber, only three
species were present in sufficient abundance and sizes to allow sustainable utilisation.
Of the 12 pole species identified, six were not vulnerable to exploitation, and of the
preferred medicinal tree species only five were considered to fit into this category.
Low resource availability and the need to address the interests of adjacent
communities necessitated management options which enable access to some resources
and benefits the communities as well as conservation measures to protect the
biodiversity. A range of joint forest management options is discussed in order to
assess the feasibility of a collaborative approach in the management of Nyungwe
Forest. Some recommendations are made with respect to access to resources, the use
of substitutes and areas for future research. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Nyungwe Bos in die suidweste van Rwanda word omring deur 'n digte bevolking van
350 mense/km- wat van bestaanslandbou en lewende hawe afhanklik is. Vorige
verslae het aangedui dat die voortbestaan van die Bos bedreig word deur die
onwettige gebruik van sy hulpbronne. 'n Evaluering is in vyf gemeenskappe
(Communes) langs die Bos gedoen om die gemeenskap se persepsies oor, gebruike
van en belangstelling in die toegang tot die Bos, sowel as die bestuur daarvan te
bestudeer. Die mense van hierdie plattelandse gebied is by die evaluering betrek.
Respondente sien die Bos as 'n bron van produkte wat in 18 kategorieë ingedeel kan
word, maar waarvan slegs 14 kategorieë van waarde is vir die respondente om 'n
bestaan te kan maak. Meer as 55% van die respondente het grond, hout en minerale
(goud) as die belangrikste hulpbronne aangedui. Ander belangrike hulpbronne sluit in
veevoer of weivelde, houtartikels, brandhout en pale. Die respondente het 14
verskillende houtspesies verkies as timmerhout, 16 vir pale, 45 vir medisinale
gebruike, en ses vir houtartikels. Die meerderheid van hierdie spesies is egter verkies
vir veelvuldige gebruike soos timmerhout, pale en medisyne.
'n Evaluering van die hulpbronne in die bos is uitgevoer om te bepaal hoeveel bome
van die gunstelingspesies daar in die bos is. Nie al die houthulpbronne wat deur die
respondente verkies is, was beskikbaar nie, en sommige boomspesies is glad nie in die
Bos gevind nie. Ten einde boomspesies te identifiseer wat vir lewensmiddele gebuik
kan word, is 'n kombinasie van verskillende kriteria gebruik, insluitende die
hoeveelheid bome (digtheid), dominansie, die verspreiding van die verskillende klasse
deursneegroottes, en regenerasie. Van die 12 boomspesies in die Bos wat na
aanleiding van hierdie evaluering opgeteken is en wat voorheen as gunstelingspesies
vir timmerhout aangedui is, is daar slegs drie wat volop en groot genoeg is om vir
lewensmiddele gebruik te word. Van die 12 spesies wat vir pale geïdentifiseer is, is
ses teen oorontginning bestand, en van die gunsteling medisinale boomspesies val
slegs vyf in laasgenoemde kategorie.
Lae hulpbronbeskikbaarheid en die behoefte om die aangrensende gemeenskappe se
belange aan te spreek, het bestuuropsies genoodsaak wat toegang tot sommige
hulpbronne moontlik maak en wat die gemeenskappe bevoordeel, sowel as
bewaringsmaatreëls ten einde die biodiversiteit te beskerm. 'n Verskeidenheid
gesamentlike bosbestuuropsies is bespreek ten einde die uitvoerbaarheid van 'n
benadering van samewerking in die bestuur van die Nyungwe Bos te ondersoek.
Enkele aanbevelings is gemaak wat betref toegang tot hulpbronne, die gebruik van
plaasvervangers, en studiegebiede vir verdere navorsing.
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(Re)articulating remains : mass grave exhumation and genocide corpses in RwandaMajor, Laura January 2016 (has links)
In Rwanda, graves containing the bodies of those killed during conflict and the 1994 genocide hold great significance both for the Rwandan state and for individuals caught up in the violent conflicts that have troubled the country over the last century. The ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) has initiated a national exhumation program, unearthing thousands of genocide victims. The exhumations are undertaken by genocide survivors and local community members who unearth the bodies, disarticulate the corpses, wash and layout the bones for re-internment together. The destruction of graves and/or the reconstruction of memorials takes place alongside this process, a transformation into collective spaces of genocide ‘remembrance’. My thesis interrogates these processes and considers a conundrum: in as much as these are revealing acts, making visible the horrors of a violent death, that also conceal and complicate. Understanding the multiple intentions behind this work requires a delicate unpacking of the everyday presence of uncertainty within Rwanda post-genocide and a careful consideration of the properties of materials through which troubling memories are made visible. These are inherently risky projects and thinking through the transformations that are enacted upon the recovered items invites fresh review of the potential for material remains of the dead to evoke destabilizing pasts or assist in the imagining of the future at a salient moment for Rwanda.
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Evaluation of the budgetary allocation policy on the levels and quality of public agriculture budgets and expenditures in Malawi and RwandaKisira, Simon 26 March 2015 (has links)
M.A. (Public Management and Governance) / This study sought to assess the main outcomes of the 2003 Maputo Declaration encapsulating the political decision of the Heads of State of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), within the framework of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP), to allocate at least 10% of national public budgets to the agriculture sector. The scope of the assessment included the levels, composition, efficiency and effectiveness of public expenditures in the agriculture sector. For this reason, the study not only sought to find out the calibration of the levels and quantities of resources allocated to, or spent in the agriculture sector, but also undertook a diagnosis of the composition and patterns in resource allocations and expenditures in the agriculture sector. The study, designed in form of an exploratory and pilot research, was conducted in two African countries (Rwanda and Malawi) and adopted an orientation towards discovering ideas and insights – not for purposes of coming up with final answers or decisions, but rather for providing a better understanding of the situation to inform the construction of larger research efforts. Specifically, the study aimed to: i) determine the patterns in public agriculture allocations and expenditure after the Maputo Declaration; ii) to identify the factors that determine or influence the levels and composition of budgetary allocations and expenditure in the public agricultural sector. From the population frame comprising all 54 member states of the African Union, a purposive stratified sampling method was employed to select the two countries. A judicious blend of qualitative and quantitative methods and attendant techniques was employed in data collection and analysis. Qualitative information was collected largely using a literature review and participatory research methods, such as semi-structured interviews with key informants. On the other hand, quantitative information was collected using a suite of methods and tools, such as simple questionnaires administered among specific country respondents. Anecdotal evidence drawn from literature review showed that Malawi allocates well above the 10% CAADP target for its national resources to agriculture, while Rwanda, in spite of being the first country on the continent to sign the CAADP Compact, allocates less than 10% of its public resources to the sector. The research, undertaking a deeper analysis revealed that Malawi exhibited consistent increases in the percentages of agricultural expenditure as a share of the national expenditure for the entire period under study (2000 to 2013), except in 2002/03 and in 2008/09. In fact, there is evidence that Malawi spent over 30% of its national resources on agriculture, although this percentage declined to 24.7% in the subsequent year. Most of Malawi’s expenditure is explained by the thrust that the government had placed on farm-input subsidies. It is also noteworthy that a significant proportion of Malawi’s agriculture budget (about 80%) is funded by external donors. The research revealed that the expectations of agriculture’s contribution to the growth and development of the national economy forms part of the major explanations behind the gigantic proportions of the national budget allocated to the agricultural sector. This is consistent with findings of another study that showed that show that agricultural-led economic growth has a greater impact on poverty reduction than does the same level of growth driven by non-agricultural sectors. Rwanda exhibited clearly different trends in agriculture expenditure from those exhibited by Malawi; with the exception of a spike recorded in 2001-2002, the subsequent periods all the way to the year 2006 show a consistent decline in expenditure. This study revealed that the share of agriculture expenditure in the national total fell from 8.6% recorded in 2002 to 3.3% in 2006. The patterns in agriculture budget allocations and public expenditure in Rwanda continued to drop and, in the best case scenario, the allocation patterns stagnated. The reasons for the drop before 2007 are unclear. However, Rwanda registered a consistent rise in public expenditure in the agricultural sector after 2007, both in absolute and relative terms. It is recalled that Rwanda was the first country on the continent to sign the CAADP Compact in 2007.
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Poverty and government expenditure: an assessment of the impact of government expenditure and interventions on poor groups with a focus on RwandaMusahara, Herman January 2004 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / In this thesis the author undertook a poverty and policy analysis. It is argued that it is important to understand the nature, magnitude and context of poverty before one can undertake an informed policy prescription. Existing theories of poverty, welfare regimes and social policies offer a lot of useful lessons for policy, but have limitations in offering a single model for Rwanda. The thesis demonstrated that, not only is Rwandan poverty multifaceted and deep, but it is characterized by a poverty conflict trap that can be traced back to the entire post colonial period. The author argued however that the current policy is not only inefficient in targeting poverty, but it may be unable to meet the challenges of growth, redistribution and conflict mitigation. The thesis, after further analyzing policy options, puts forward a package that is needed to reduce poverty in Rwanda in the long term and to break the poverty conflict trap. The prescribed package is put forward as a comprehensive and institutionalized social policy, which Rwanda so far does not have. / South Africa
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