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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Kenya Army"

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PARSONS, TIMOTHY H. "MAU MAU'S ARMY OF CLERKS: COLONIAL MILITARY SERVICE AND THE KENYA LAND FREEDOM ARMY IN KENYA'S NATIONAL IMAGINATION". Journal of African History 58, n.º 2 (7 de junho de 2017): 285–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021853717000044.

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AbstractScholarly and popular histories of Kenya largely agree that African Second World War veterans played a central role in the Kenya Land Freedom Army. Former African members of the colonial security forces have reinforced these assumptions by claiming to have been covert Mau Mau supporters, either after their discharge, or as serving soldiers. In reality, few Mau Mau generals had actual combat experience. Those who served in the colonial military usually did so in labor units or support arms. It therefore warrants asking why so many Kenyans accept that combat veterans played such a central role in the KLFA and in Kenyan history. Understanding how veterans of the colonial army have become national heroes, both for their wartime service and their supposed leadership of Mau Mau, reveals the capacity of popular history to create more useful and inclusive forms of African nationalism.
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Gathogo, Julius. "‘WOMEN, COME AND ROAST YOUR OWN RAM!’: RECOLLECTIONS ON MAU-MAU GENERAL CHUI WA MARARO (1927–1956)". Oral History Journal of South Africa 2, n.º 1 (22 de setembro de 2016): 102–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/2309-5792/1586.

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Little has been written about General Chui (1927–1956), the unique and charismatic fighter during Kenya’s war of independence, yet he worked hand-in-hand with Field Marshall Dedan Kimathi Wachiuri, the overall commander of Kenya Land and Freedom Army (KLFA), also called Mau- Mau fighters. Kibara wa Mararo, later General Chui, who came from Meiria residence, Mugaya state, Kamuiru village of Mutira location, Ndia Division of the present day Kirinyaga County, Kenya, became a household name, and a hero to the then marginalised African populace, after the famous Mbaara ya Rui Ruiru (battle of river Ruiru). In this war of 1953, which took place on the border of Nyeri district (which was elevated to a County in 2010) and the old Embu district (which constitutes Kirinyaga and Embu counties), Kibara wa Mararo disguised himself as a regional inspector of the police. Clad in full colonial army uniform, he was able to trick some security officers and the loyalists who were derogatorily called Tukonia (empty sacks). This made them quickly rush to meet their boss. In a twinkle of an eye, the coded language (kebunoko) was sounded calling the Mau-Mau fighters who eventually turned their guns on the officers thereby wiping them clean in one blow. It is from there that the Mau-Mau high command declared him an army general. Since then, he became known as General Chui – ‘Chui’ meaning the sharp leopard. As Kenya marked its 50 years of independence (1963–2013), with pomp and colour, the sacrificial role of General Chui re-appears as one wonders: how was such a military genius finally ambushed at River Rwamuthambi’s Riakiania mushy cave and subsequently shot dead by the colonial forces? Did the surrendering Mau-Mau soldiers betray him, General Magazine and the other fighters who died of gun shot wounds at the Riakiania scene? Again, what were his political ideals? In its methodology, the article begins by retracing the nature of Mau-Mau movement citing the key issues that possibly caused it. It then moves on to chronicle General Chui wa Mararo as a case study. The materials in this presentation are largely gathered through interviews and archival sources.
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Kiprotich, Davies, Lilian N. Milimu e Naftali Rop. "Impact of Electronic Braille Note-Taking Devices Use on Academic Performance of Visually Impaired Learners in Selected Special Primary Schools in Kenya". International Journal of Social Science And Human Research 05, n.º 11 (2 de novembro de 2022): 481–4819. http://dx.doi.org/10.47191/ijsshr/v5-i11-01.

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Owing to technological advancements, Electronic Braille note-taking (EBN) devices have been developed and are currently in use by learners with visual impairment in Kenya. This study intends to examine the impact of EBN devices on academic performance of visually impaired learners in selected special primary schools in Kenya. The study used a descriptive design while applying both quantitative and qualitative approaches. Six special schools were purposively sampled: St. Francis Special School in West Pokot County, Marigat Special School in Baringo County, Kiomiti Special School in Kisii County, Korara Special School in Bomet County, Kibos Salvation Army School for Visually Impaired in Kisumu County and Salvation Army Thika Special Primary School in Kiambu County. The data was analyzed both descriptively and thematically. The results were presented in form of tables and figures. The findings of the study show that the EBN devices as used in the primary schools for visually Impaired learners in Kenya have a positive impact on their academic performance. This study recommends that the stakeholders of schools with Visually Impaired leaners to increase the supply and distribution of EBN devices to the schools so as to achieve the recommended 1:1 device to learner ratio.
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Duder, C. J. D. "An Army of One's Own: The Politics of the Kenya Defence Force". Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines 25, n.º 2 (1991): 207. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/485217.

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Duder, C. J. D. "An Army of One's Own: The Politics of the Kenya Defence Force". Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue canadienne des études africaines 25, n.º 2 (janeiro de 1991): 207–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00083968.1991.10803889.

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Macharia, Isaac, Fredrick Koome, Thomas Kosiom, Florence Munguti, Benard Mukoye, Esther Kimani e Kimenju J. W. "Pest Incursions Pose a Serious Threat To Food Security and the Kenyan Economy". African Phytosanitary Journal 2, n.º 1 (1 de novembro de 2020): 105–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.52855/vakd4164.

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Although Kenya has a well-developed phytosanitary system to regulate introduction of plant and plant products, several pest incursions have been reported in the last two decades. The incursions have culminated in devastating impact on agriculture, biodiversity and the entire Kenyan economy. The objective of this review is to consolidate information on the pests involved, their distribution, estimate the economic losses associated with them and management measures in place. A total of 11 major pests and diseases namely Asian citrus psyllid (ACP), Bactrocera dorsalis, Banana xanthomonas wilt (BXW), Cassava brown streak disease (CBSD), Cassava mosaic disease (CMD), Fall army worm (FAW), Maize lethal necrosis disease (MLND), Papaya mealybug (PMB), Parthenium hysterophorus, potato cyst nematode (PCN) and tomato leaf miners (Tuta absoluta) have been reported in the last two decades. Some of the pests are persistent, invasive, vicious and fast spreading. For instance, the FAW has now spread to nearly all maize growing areas in Kenya in one year after the pest was first reported in 2017. The incursion pests are a major threat to food security, expensive to control and are a barrier to international market access. Integrated measures including improvement of diagnostic potential, increased pest and disease surveillance, improvement in rapid response and pest containment are needed in view of the dangers posed by incursion pests to the entire Kenyan economy whose mainstay is agriculture. Key words: Bactrocera dorsalis, maize lethal necrosis disease, Parthenium hysterophorus, Tuta absoluta
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Matson, A. T., e D. H. Simpson. "A bibliography of the published & unpublished writings of A.T. Matson". African Research & Documentation 42 (1986): 20–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x00009316.

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Albert Thomas Matson, ‘Mat’ to his many friends, was born in Sipson, Middlesex in 1915. He was educated at Southall Grammar School before joining the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1939.1n 1944 he was seconded to the Colonial Service in Kenya as a Health Inspector. After serving in Kisii he was transferred to Nandi District in 1949, where he remained until his retirement fourteen years later.His interest in Kenyan history arose from a request from Senior Chief Elija arap Chepkwony and his colleagues of the Nandi District Council that the history of their people should be written. Matson responded to their request by undertaking research into oral history in the course of his travels as a Health Inspector and by consulting and copying a great range of archival sources, official and personal, in East Africa and in Britain.
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Matson, A. T., e D. H. Simpson. "A bibliography of the published & unpublished writings of A.T. Matson". African Research & Documentation 42 (1986): 20–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x00009316.

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Albert Thomas Matson, ‘Mat’ to his many friends, was born in Sipson, Middlesex in 1915. He was educated at Southall Grammar School before joining the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1939.1n 1944 he was seconded to the Colonial Service in Kenya as a Health Inspector. After serving in Kisii he was transferred to Nandi District in 1949, where he remained until his retirement fourteen years later.His interest in Kenyan history arose from a request from Senior Chief Elija arap Chepkwony and his colleagues of the Nandi District Council that the history of their people should be written. Matson responded to their request by undertaking research into oral history in the course of his travels as a Health Inspector and by consulting and copying a great range of archival sources, official and personal, in East Africa and in Britain.
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Turner, Luke John, D. Wilkins e J. I. J. A. Woodhouse. "Military health outreach on Exercise ASKARI SERPENT: a discussion of clinical and ethical challenges". Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps 165, n.º 5 (7 de maio de 2018): 346–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jramc-2017-000868.

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Exercise ASKARI SERPENT (Ex AS) is an annual British Army medical exercise that sees the deployment of a medical regiment to rural Kenya. The exercise involves the delivery of health outreach clinics and health education to the civilian population alongside Kenyan governmental and non-governmental organisations. This article includes a post hoc analysis of the ethical and clinical challenges that clinicians faced during Ex AS, applying a four-quadrant approach to ethical decision-making. This article intends to stimulate further debate and discussion on how to best prepare clinicians for clinical challenges and ethical decision-making on future exercises and operations. We conclude that our experiences on Ex AS can provide an insight on how to develop predeployment training for clinicians. Furthermore, the universal nature of the challenges faced on Ex AS can be applied to training for future contingency operations.
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Spencer, Steven. "“Our Foreign Field”: records of the Salvation Army in Africa". African Research & Documentation 122 (2013): 35–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x00024225.

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In the autumn and winter of 1954 Commissioner John Allan, the second-incommand of the Salvation Army, visited Africa and travelled through those countries where The Salvation Army was then established: Kenya, Rhodesia, South Africa, Nigeria, the Gold Coast, French Equatorial Africa and the Belgian Congo. During his visit he met tribal and national leaders including, on 11 November 1954 in the Gold Coast, Kwame Nkrumah in his Presidential Office, where Commissioner Allan “asked God to guide Nkrumah as he controls the destiny of his people”.When an account of the tour was written up for publication in 1955, the article began as follows:Nowadays Africa is a continent where something dramatic is always happening. One part or another is constantly in the public eye. Here and there a new order is in course of being established and, as one competent authority has stated, tomorrow's headlines are certain to come out of the Dark Continent.
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Teses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Kenya Army"

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Cheserem, Salina Jepkoech. "African responses to colonial military recruitment : the role of Askari and carriers in the first World War in the British East Africa Protectorate (Kenya)". Thesis, McGill University, 1987. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=66074.

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Carlström, Mikael, e Hampus Wargsjö. "Printing Prosthetics : Designing an additive manufactured arm for developing countries". Thesis, Luleå tekniska universitet, Institutionen för ekonomi, teknik och samhälle, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-61869.

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De traditionella armproteser som tillverkas i utvecklingsländer står inför stora problem i att leverera patienter med lämpliga hjälpmedel. Processen är inte bara tidskrävande eftersom varje enhet måste anpassas för varje enskild användare men vissa komponenter kan inte produceras lokalt vilket driver upp priset ytterligare. Syftet med detta examensarbete var att utveckla en armprotes för utvecklingsländerna med hjälp av additiv tillverkning (3D Printing) för klienten 3D Life Prints som baseras i Nairobi, Kenya. En protes är ett hjälpmedel som används för att underlätta en amputerad människa i dagliga aktiviteter och med hjälp av additiv tillverkning kan även en lokal tillverkningsprocess utvecklas och förbättras vilket skulle kunna minska tiden för tillverkning och distribution av proteser. Den initiala protesen, som låg till grund för designarbetet, var en underarmsprotes som fortfarande var i utvecklingsstadiet hos klienten. Protesen tillverkades med hjälp av tillverkningsmetoden Fused Deposit Modelling (FDM), som har den fördelen att den använder sig av relativt billiga 3D skrivare. För att sammanfatta syftet med projektet utvecklades följande frågeställningar 1. Hur tillverkas, distribueras och används konventionella proteser i jämförelse med additivt tillverkade proteser i Nairobi, Kenya? 2. Vem är den primära användaren av proteser i utvecklingsländer, vilka problem upplevs hos dagens lösningar och vilka faktorer anses vara den viktigaste hos användaren? Och varför?  3. Hur ska additivt tillverkade proteser utformas för optimal användning i utvecklingsländer?  Förutom att besvara frågeställningarna var målet att utvecklingen av systemet skulle leda till förbättrad funktionalitet för användaren och underlätta tillverkningen för organisationen.  För att få en allmän översikt över det vetenskapliga området av additivt tillverkade proteser studerades kontexten för utvecklingsländer, användarcentrerad design (eftersom syftet var att förbättra en produkt för en specifik användare), armproteser och additiv tillverkning. Resultatet, från de olika stadier av designprocessen, var den slutgiltiga designen av "3D Life Arm". Det slutliga systemet bestod av fyra huvudkomponenter, Kroppsselen, Inlägget, Proteshanden och Hylsan. Komponenterna använde sig utav additiv tillverkning i både styvt material (Kroppsselen, Hylsan och Inlägget) och flexibelt material (Proteshanden). Lokalt tillgängliga komponenter användes där additiv tillverkning inte var möjligt till exempel fisketråd och skruvar. En slutsats drogs att de två faktorer som ansågs viktigast för användaren var att produkten skulle vara estetiskt tilltalande och billig. Även sociala stigman spelar en stor roll och enligt användare och experter i Nairobi, måste protesen efterlikna den saknade armen så mycket som möjligt för att kunna smälta in. Författarna konstaterade att kostnaden var den viktigaste faktorn när man utformar proteser för utvecklingsländerna, eftersom användaren i dagsläget inte har råd med de proteser som tillverkas i Nairobi. Sammanfattningsvis utfördes en kostnads- och tidsanalys för att kontrollera tillverkningskostnaderna för hela systemet. Med tre skrivare kunde alla delar tillverkas för 282 kronor och skulle ta cirka 15 timmar och 15 minuter att skriva ut som är betydligt lägre än de funktionella proteser som tillverkades i Nairobi. Ytterligare utvärderingar krävs för att fastställa att protesen kommer att klara av påfrestningarna från dagliga aktiviteter hos användaren och en fungerande strategi för passning måste utvärderas ytterligare. Författarna tror dock att med hjälp av en fullt utbildad protestillverkare finns det en framtid för additiv tillverkning av armproteser.
The traditional prosthetic arms that are being fitted in developing countries are facing major issues in suppling patients with proper assistive aids. Not only is the process time consuming with every single unit having to be customized for the user but some parts can’t be locally produced which drives up price even further. The objective of this master thesis was to develop a prosthetic arm for developing countries with the help of additive manufacturing (3D printing) for the client 3D Life Prints which are based in Nairobi, Kenya. A prosthesis is used to aid an amputee in daily living activities. With additive manufacturing the intention is that a local manufacturing process could be developed and improved which would reduce the time of fitting and distributing a prosthesis. The initial prosthesis, that was the origin of the design, was a below elbow prosthetic arm that was being developed by the client. The prosthesis was fabricated with the additive manufacturing process fused deposition modelling (FDM) which has the advantage of providing the cheapest printers. To summarize the aim of the project the research questions that was established was as followed 1. How are conventional prosthetic arms generally being manufactured, distributed and used compared to additive manufactured prostheses in Nairobi, Kenya?  2. Who is the primary user of prosthetic arms in developing countries, what problems are they facing with current solutions and what factors are considered as the most important? And why? 3. How should additive manufactured prostheses be designed for optimal usage in developing countries? In addition to answer the research questions the aim was that the development of the system would lead to enhanced functionality for the user and to facilitate manufacturing for the organization. To get a general overview of additive manufacturing prostheses the fields theories that was studied included context of developing countries, user centred design (since the aim was to approve on a product which needed to suit a specific user), upper limb prostheses and additive manufacturing. As a result, from different stages of the design process a final design was reached called the “3D Life Arm”.  The final system was comprised of four main components, the Harness system, the Insert, the Cover and the Socket. These components used additive manufacturing in both rigid material (Harness parts, Socket and Insert) and flexible material (the Cover). Locally available components were used for parts not feasible to additive manufacture e.g. fishing wire and screws. The two factors that were concluded to be the most important for the user were the aesthetic appeal and cost. With social stigmas playing a major part according to users and experts in Nairobi, the prosthesis needs to resemble the missing limb as much as possible. It was concluded that cost was the major factor when designing prostheses for developing countries since user just wasn’t able to afford the prostheses that was being manufactured in Nairobi. In the end a cost and time analysis was conducted to verify what price the complete system would need to be manufactured. With three printers all parts could be printed for the price of 282 SEK and would take approximately 15 hours and 15 minutes to print which is considerably lower than that of the functional prosthesis being distributed in Nairobi. Further evaluations need to be done to establish that the prosthesis will manage the strains and stresses of daily living activities of the user and a complete fitting strategy needs to be evaluated further. It’s the authors belief however, that with the help of fully educated prosthetist there is a future for additive manufacturing of upper limb amputees.
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Kiugu, Aphaxard M. "The proliferation and illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons in the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa". Fort Leavenworth, KS : US Army Command and General Staff College, 2007. http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA471369.

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Livros sobre o assunto "Kenya Army"

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Sitienei, Joyce. The soldier's legacy: The Kenya Army at 55 : a steadfast shield since 1963 into prosperity. Nairobi, Kenya: The Kenya Army, 2018.

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Guy, Campbell. The charging buffalo: A history of the Kenya Regiment. London: Cooper in association with Secker & Warburg, 1986.

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Parker, Ian. The last colonial regiment: The history of the Kenya regiment (T.F.). Kinloss: Librario Pub., 2009.

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Atieno Odhiambo, E. S., 1946- e Lonsdale John, eds. Mau Mau & nationhood: Arms, authority & narration. Oxford: James Currey, 2003.

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Kenya. Office of the President. Provincial Administration. Kenya national action plan for arms control and management. Nairobi, Kenya: Government of Kenya, Office of the President, Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons, 2006.

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Kenya. Office of the President. Provincial Administration. e Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons., eds. Kenya national action plan for arms control and management. Nairobi, Kenya: Government of Kenya, Office of the President, Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons, 2006.

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Kenya. Office of the President. Provincial Administration. e Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons., eds. Kenya national action plan for arms control and management. Nairobi, Kenya: Government of Kenya, Office of the President, Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons, 2006.

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Kenya. Office of the President. Provincial Administration. e Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons., eds. Kenya national action plan for arms control and management. Nairobi, Kenya: Government of Kenya, Office of the President, Kenya National Focal Point on Small Arms and Light Weapons, 2006.

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Ndung'u, James. Controlling small arms and light weapons in Kenya and Uganda: Progress so far. Nairobi, Kenya: Saferworld, 2011.

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Mwachofi, Singo, Wairagu Francis e Security Research & Information Centre (Nairobi, Kenya), eds. Terrorized citizens: Profiling small arms and insecurity in the north rift region of Kenya. Westlands, Nairobi: Security Research and Information Centre, 2003.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Kenya Army"

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Elliott, Denielle. "The Walter Reed Project/US Army Research Unit". In Reimagining Science and Statecraft in Postcolonial Kenya, 121–23. New York : Routledge, 2018. | Series: Routledge contemporary Africa series: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315163840-19.

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Diphoorn, Tessa. "‘Arms for mobility’: policing partnerships and material exchanges in Nairobi, Kenya". In Ethnography and the Evocative World of Policing, 141–57. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003455318-11.

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Beckett, Ian F. W. "A People’s Army". In The British Army, 109—C4F7. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198871040.003.0005.

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Abstract The two world wars necessitated the introduction of conscription, previously only applied for a limited period to the militia and occasionally for an even more limited period to the regular army in the early eighteenth century. Conscription in the form of national service was then continued until 1963. The creation of a ‘nation in arms’ placed new military, political, and social pressures on the army in both world wars. At the same time the army had to come to terms with the transformational nature of mass modern warfare. Contrasting Continental and imperial/colonial roles also came into play not just in the inter-war period but also in the friction between the conventional challenges of the Cold War and the less conventional (if sometimes traditional but also evolving) demands of decolonization conflicts. The chapter covers the period 1914–63, including both the First and Second World Wars and immediate post-war conflict, as in Korea, Malaya, and Kenya, and discussions of commanders such as Haig, Montgomery, Slim, and Templer.
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Bennett, Huw C. "The British Army and Controlling Barbarization during the Kenya Emergency". In Warrior's Dishonour, 59–80. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315547640-4.

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Odongoh, Stevens Aguto. "Displacement Beyond Borders". In Advances in Religious and Cultural Studies, 82–102. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4438-9.ch005.

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This chapter focuses on how the Northern Uganda war between the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and the Ugandan Army (1987-2008) reformulated Acholi people's local construction of place, political belonging, material, and emotional connections. In other words, how historical processes with war, flight, and displacement reshaped meaning of being Acholi in Northern Uganda. The two-decade period of war in Northern Uganda (1986-2008) led to the displacement of Acholi people both internally and externally. Almost the whole population of Acholiland were affected by the LRA insurgency that dismantled societal structures that had for long anchored Acholi culture. During this turbulent period, Acholi people lived in camps and in the neighboring countries, especially Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Central African Republic (CAR), and Kenya, among others. This gives this conflict a cross-border dimension.
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Strawson, John. "The Thirty Years Peace". In The Oxford History Of The British Army, 343–61. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192853332.003.0016.

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Abstract Between 1963 and 1992, the British army helped to keep the peace in Europe while waging numerous little wars elsewhere. Its strength declined from 170,000 to 153,000. Its capabilities were enhanced by excellent equipment which could be used as effectively in Europe as it could in the South Atlantic or Arabia. Although small the army led the world in experience. Its soldiers saw much active service as the campaign medals on their tunics showed. Composed entirely of volunteers, organized in regi-ments and corps with fiercely guarded tradition and spirit, it spread itself round the world and adapted itself to tasks as various as those in Cyprus, Belize, Borneo, the Falkland Islands, Arabia, Northern Ireland, and BAOR. In 1963 Macmillan’s Government argued that the Suez crisis had emphasized Britain’s economic weakness. Military expenditure would have to be cut. This meant reducing overseas commitments. Moreover, it was decided to end national service. These measures were given effect by the Sandys White Paper of 1957, and determined the army’s composition in the early 1960s. There was still much for the now all-regular army to do. In all 55,000 troops made up the British Army of the Rhine. In June 1961, 6,000 soldiers had been sent to Kuwait to meet a threat from Iraq. British forces were still committed in 1963 to support Aden’s joining the Federation of South Arabia. There were bases in Kenya, Hong Kong, Malaya, and Singapore. The British army was soon to be heavily engaged in both the Middle East and Far East.
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Moore, Adam. "Military Contracting, Foreign Workers, and War". In Empire's Labor, 1–14. Cornell University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501742170.003.0001.

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This chapter outlines the scale and scope of privatized military work in the present day and compares this with earlier practices of contracting by the U.S. military. It explains the rise of large-scale logistics outsourcing since the end of the Cold War. The chapter also introduces U.S. military's overseas operations regarding recognized wars and clandestine campaigns. It also analyzes the labor required to sustain such operations, and the experiences of people from around the world that do it. The present-day U.S. military empire is profoundly dependent upon a global army of labor that comes from countries as diverse as Bosnia, the Philippines, Turkey, India, Kenya, the United Kingdom, Sierra Leone, and Fiji.
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"Which Regulations Offer Subjects the Best Protection Preventing HIV Status Disclosure in a Community-Based Circumcision Study in Rural Uganda". In Ethical Issues in International Biomedical Research, editado por James V. Lavery, Christine Grady, Elizabeth R. Wahl e Ezekiel J. Emanuel, 246–60. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195179224.003.0016.

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Abstract Uganda is a country of 28 million people in east Africa, bordered by the Democratic Republic of the Congo to its west, Sudan to its north, Kenya to its east and Tanzania and Rwanda to its south. Uganda achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1962, but most of its independence has been spent in political turmoil. Idi Amin’s rule from 1971 to 1979 resulted in the killing of over 300,000 of his opponents. His successor, Milton Obotoe, oversaw the murder of an additional 100,000 people. Finally, in 1986, a guerilla army lead by the current President, Yoweri Museveni, took power and established a one party, or as some call it non-party, state, but with a free press. The current constitution was enacted in 1995, followed by the first democratic elections. Most recently, Museveni amended the Ugandan constitution and, in February 2006, won a 3rd term as president.
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Lorbiecki, Marybeth. "Paths of Violence: 1939– 1945". In A Fierce Green Fire. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199965038.003.0017.

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In September 1939, Germany invaded Poland. During the dark months of 1939, 1940, and 1941, Europe exploded with tanks, bombs, and guns. The violent side of Hitler’s new German policies proved worse than Leopold had imagined possible. A letter arrived from Leopold’s host in Germany, Alfred Schottlaender. Schottlaender’s wife had turned him in to the secret police for making antiHitler comments. He had been interned both at Dachau and Buchenwald but had managed to escape to Kenya. He was writing to ask Aldo to help his brother, who was still in Germany. Leopold contacted those he knew, and a place was found in South Africa for Alfred’s brother. “My dear friend Leopold,” responded Alfred, “[You] have given me back the faith of faithfulness, truth, and friendship still existing on earth, which I nearly had lost after having lived to see such terrible disap­pointments in my own country which I loved so much and served all my life.” Violence seemed to be the common link between the many ways humans acted toward the land and toward each other. Leopold began to refer to con­servation as a movement toward “nonviolent land use,” where changes are made gradually and carefully, keeping the land community stable. Then the exploding violence hit the States: the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The next day, Carl enlisted in the marines. On the edge of twenty-two, he had just begun graduate studies in wildlife ecology in Missouri. He hurried to marry Keena Rogers before leaving for combat. Luna enlisted in the army and was sent to California as an army engineer. Starker, who had married and was expecting a child, kept working, but dreaded the mail, which could carry a draft notice any day. Many of the Professor’s graduate and undergraduate students quit school to enlist. Vivian Horn resigned to do her part for the war effort. Sometime in 1942, a round robin of letters was begun between the department and those who had left. Each recipient added comments and sent the letter on to some­one else.
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"Kamla Patel, Kenya/India". In I Have in My Arms Both Ways: Migrant Women Talk about their Lives, editado por Adrienne Jansen. Bridget Williams Books, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.7810/9780908321773_1.

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Trabalhos de conferências sobre o assunto "Kenya Army"

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Solomos, A., AM Musa, J. Mbui, R. Mohammed, J. Olobo, KKD Ritmeijer, G. Alcoba et al. "Efficacy and safety of 14-day treatment with paromomycin and miltefosine for primary visceral leishmaniasis in eastern Africa: non-inferiority trial". In MSF Scientific Day International 2023. NYC: MSF-USA, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.57740/y4z2-pq54.

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INTRODUCTION The parasitic disease visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is most commonly caused by Leishmania donovani in eastern Africa, currently the region with highest burden worldwide. Current treatment for VL comprises the combination of sodium stibogluconate and paromomycin, SSG/PM; this is toxic, painful, and requires hospitalisation and daily injections. Treatments are urgently needed that are safe, effective, and appropriate for use in remote areas. METHODS We conducted a phase III open-label randomised non-inferiority trial in Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, and Uganda. The trial used a parallel-arm design with two arms, comparing the combination regimen of 20 mg/kg/day paromomycin and allometric miltefosine (MF) for 14 days with the current 17-day standard of care, 20 mg/kg/day SSG and 15 mg/kg/day PM. We enrolled adults and children aged 4-50 years with primary VL, without HIV or severe concomitant disease co-infection. The primary endpoint was definitive cure at 6 months’ follow-up. ETHICS This study was approved by the MSF Ethics Review Board and by ethics committees at the Institute of Endemic Diseases, Khartoum, Sudan; Kenya Medical Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya; Makerere University, Uganda; and the University of Gondar, Ethiopia. Clinicaltrials.gov registry number, NCT03129646. RESULTS 439 predominantly male (80%) patients aged 4 to 50 years were recruited over a period of 29 months. A similar proportion of patients in the PM/MF and the SSG/PM arms achieved definitive cure at 6-month follow-up in primary efficacy analysis using modified intention-to-treat; mITT; 91.2% cure for PM/MF (97.5% confidence interval, CI, 85-98.6) and 91.8% for SSG/PM (97.5% CI, 85.6-99.2). Non-inferiority was not demonstrated in the mITT population, with the upper limit of the 97.5% CI, 7.4%, slightly exceeding the non-inferiority margin of 7%. However, the per protocol analysis did show non-inferiority, with 92% (97.5% CI, 85-98.5) cure in the PM/MF arm, as compared to 91.7% (97.5% CI, 84.7-98.2) in the SSG/PM arm. Most adverse drug reactions (ADR’s) were mild to moderate. The most common expected ADR’s were MF-related vomiting, and PM-related injection site pain and hypoacusis. ADR’s suggesting SSG-related cardiac toxicity were reported in 6.5% (11/170) of patients in the SSG/PM arm. Eighteen serious adverse events were reported in 13 patients, four of which were considered related to study drugs. Fatality rate in the trial was 0.9% (4/439), with one death judged due to SSG-related cardiotoxicity. CONCLUSION The results of this study demonstrate that the 14-day PM/MF regimen achieved a clinically meaningful rate of cure with very similar efficacy to the standard of care, SSG/PM. It was generally well tolerated, with ADR’s as expected, based on the known safety profiles of study drugs. The PM/MF regimen has one fewer painful injection per day, a 3-day shorter treatment duration, and with no risk of SSG-associated life threating cardiotoxicity, as compared to SSG/PM. This regimen may therefore provide a more patient-friendly alternative for adults and children with VL in eastern Africa. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST None declared
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Relatórios de organizações sobre o assunto "Kenya Army"

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Wilson, Emily, Susannah Davidson, Andrew McDermott e Angela Urban. Hazardous and solid waste management planning in select African countries. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), março de 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/48333.

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Managing wastes produced during contingency operations in United States Africa Command (USAFRICOM) locations has historically relied on local contract disposal or open-air burn pits, which have been shown to be harmful to the health of service members. Posture locations that can find alternative ways to manage waste, specifically through contracts with the host country’s waste services, can better protect the health and safety of the warfighter and the native landscapes. African waste systems are complex, decentralized systems with considerable regional variation. The lack of government-funded waste management services leaves many residents with few options for safe disposal. The differing waste disposal strategies are described to offer guidance for military operations in the focus countries of Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Niger, Senegal, and Uganda. Relevant international agreements regulating the flow of hazardous waste across borders that can impact disposal plans are also noted. This report serves as a reference to develop waste management alternatives in the USAFRICOM area of responsibility (AOR). Official Department of Defense and Army regulations should be consulted when devising an integrated waste management plan.
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he Lion, the Leopard, the Hyena and the Fox: Pastoralist Researchers on the Uganda/Kenya Border. Institute of Development Studies, maio de 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2024.014.

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We are continuing from our previous book, One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Pastoralist Researchers on the Uganda/Kenya Border. That book showed the insecurity in Karamoja and Turkana in 2023. When we showed the first book to the government officials in Karamoja and Kam pala, they said, it’s a very nice thing. When we gave it to the Turkana County Government and Members of Parlia ment, they also complimented it. In the face of the problems, pastoralist leaders have decided a new strategy. This second book records what we learned from May 2023 to March 2024. For instance, a new Brigade Commander was appointed to Kotido. He had sittings with young people. He came among them, not like any other soldier to be feared. He found people, he sat, he shared. Even the warriors who feared the army were willing to meet him. In this book we characterise governments, security forces, raiders and thieves as animals who live among us. When we are living with lions, leopards, hyenas, and foxes in the bush, we get to know them and how they live. Then we assess ourselves. Are we the ones that are confusing the animals and causing any of them to act dangerously? It is as if we have been trying to attack these animals, but they have escaped us. We look at our own skills, strengths, and weaknesses. What energy do we have? It is not an easy thing to move from here. We must find ways to coax these animals to bring them to good relations with us.
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Strengthening End Use/r Control Systems to Prevent Arms Diversion: Examining Common Regional Understandings. UNIDIR, agosto de 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.37559/caap/17/wam/03.

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This study presents the key findings of the second phase of the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR) project Tackling Diversion (Phase II): Promoting Regional Dialogue to Enhance Common Understanding and Cooperation to Strengthen End Use/r Control Systems, supporting the practical and effective implementation of the United Nations Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects (PoA) and the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) as well as relevant regional and subregional instruments. It draws upon the discussions conducted during two regional and one subregional consultative meetings in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean during 2016–2017: Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, 21–22 September 2016; Nairobi, Kenya, 6–7 October 2016; and Bangkok, Thailand, 1–2 March 2017. This study also draws upon the results of the UNIDIR survey, which was circulated to all United Nations Member States during the first phase of the project Tackling Diversion (Phase I): Examining Options and Models for Harmonization of End Use/r Control Systems in mid-2015, and re-circulated during project Phase II, as well as desk research.
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