AIDS--the leading cause of adult death in the West African City of Abidjan, Ivory Coast

Science ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 249 (4970) ◽  
pp. 793-796 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. De Cock ◽  
B Barrere ◽  
L Diaby ◽  
M. Lafontaine ◽  
E Gnaore ◽  
...  
1963 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. S. Alexander

The purpose of this article is not only to explain an African constitution, but also to examine, in that context, certain general ideas about constitutions and politics. The Ivory Coast, a former French West African colony, gained full independence as late as 1960. As a newly independent state, with a population of under four million, the Ivory Coast is participating in a nation-building experiment which the flood of new countries has made a widespread phenomenon of our times. The experiment is doubly meaningful for other countries. First, its results will weigh significantly in the balance of world power; secondly, as Ivorians look to the western example in pursuing their experiment, the West can see, reflected in Ivorians' words and deeds, a new and different image of itself.


Author(s):  
Inger Sjørslev

The West African city Abomey was the centre of the kingdom Dahomey, notorious for its slave raids, ritual sacrifices of human beings, and its religious belief in vodhuns. Today a peaceful town in the state of Benin, its visual non-citylike impression provides the outset for reflections on what constitutes a city. The article digs into the history of the kingdom of Dahomey and relates how it was constructed on the basis of expansion and incorporation of its enemies through assimilation, but also symbolically expressed in rituals that celebrated the conquest of the enemies. Such stories are recounted today in the historical royal palace, the Musée Historique d’Abomey, where the famous bas-reliefs and the stories of how the kings’ palaces were built on the blood of the enemies testify to the historical drama of the kingdom. The article compares today’s city of Abomey with the neighbouring city of Bohicon, which at first glance seems to live up to expected standards of what constitutes a modern city much better than does Abomey. However, it is argued that commerce, exchange, heterogeneity and traffic are not enough to constitute a city. Historically, Abomey had an aura of holiness to it, which sprang from its placement at the centre of the kingdom, but also from its being the frame for the temples of the gods and the king. This gives rise to a question of what kind of holiness can be attributed to modern cities. If they are not “holy” by virtue of being cities of kings or historical centres, cities will have to create themselves for instance through performative culture and historical recreation.  


1975 ◽  
Vol 19 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 36-51
Author(s):  
J. Alibert ◽  
J.-E. Sathoud

On May 12th, 1962, the West African Monetary Union was established by treaty between six French-speaking African states, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Upper Volta, Niger and Dahomey. This Union is linked with France by a system of “operations accounts” concluded between the French Treasury and individual issuing banks. The system ensures the free inter-state convertibility of their currencies and with the French franc, the C.F.A.F. (Communauté Financière Africaine Franc) being guaranteed by the French Republic. Under this system commercial and financial transactions are free within this monetary area, and within the Franc Zone. A common central bank, the Central Bank of West African States, was set up.


Author(s):  
Valentin Vydrin

The Mande language Dan, which is spoken in the West African countries of Guinea, the Ivory Coast, and Liberia, is among the few African languages that distinguish between five tone registers. Metrical feet in this language play a role with respect to nasal harmony as well as tonal and vocalic combinations. This chapter also presents a general overview of simple and complex sentences, with a special focus on locative marking, which constitutes a prominent morphosyntactic feature of Dan nouns, as well as on lability, which is a typologically interesting feature of the other major category in the language, the verb.


Author(s):  
Didier VandenSpiegel ◽  
Sergei I. Golovatch ◽  
Armand R. Nzoko Fiemapong

A new genus, Campodesmoides gen. nov., is described to only encompass C. corniger sp. nov., from Cameroon. This genus and species is distinguished from the few known species of the small western African family Campodesmidae, all currently in Campodesmus, by the much longer antennae and legs, the normal pore formula with ozopores borne on porosteles, and the suberect and distally twisted gonopod, coupled with peculiar horns on a few anterior postcollum segments. A new Campodesmus is also described, C. alobatus sp. nov., from Ivory Coast, which differs from congeners primarily in the lack of a dorsal/lateral lobe on the otherwise usual and strongly subcircular gonopod telopodite, albeit the latter is not directed mesad, but held subparallel to the main body axis.


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