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1

IACO, Workshop (1995 Kampala Uganda). Improving coffee management systems in Africa: Proceedings of IACO Workshop, Kampala, Uganda, 4-6 September, 1995. Kampala, Uganda: African Crop Science Society, Makerere University, 1996.

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2

Gebre-Egziabher, Tegegne. Rural-urban linkages under different farming systems: The cases of coffee and non-coffee growing regions in Ethiopia. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: Organization for Social Science Research in Eastern and Southern, 2001.

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3

Suremain, Charles-Edouard de. Jours ordinaires à la finca: Une grande plantation de café au Guatemala. Paris: Editions de l'ORSTOM, 1996.

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4

Schmitt, Christine B. Montane rainforest with wild Coffea arabica in the Bonga region (SW Ethiopia): Plant diversity, wild coffee management and implications for conservation. Göttingen: Cuvillier, 2006.

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5

Kanten, Rudolf F. van. Competitive interactions in agroforestry systems: Competitive interactions between Coffea arabica L. and fast-growing timber shade trees in southern Costa Rica. Eschborn: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit, 2003.

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6

Wakjira, Feyera Senbeta. Biodiversity and ecology of Afromontane rainforests with wild Coffea arabica L. populations in Ethiopia. Göttingen: Cuvillier Verlag, 2006.

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7

Acción y discurso: Alternativas de comunicación en la red de Internet por parte de los productores de café orgánico en México. Ciudad Juárez: Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez, 2011.

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8

O'Connor, Niall. Constraints and solutions to small scale tree nursery management in the coffee based land-use systems of Murang'a District, Central Highlands, Kenya. Dublin: University College Dublin, 1997.

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9

Akiyama, T. Impact of the International Coffee Agreement's export quota system on the world's coffee market. Washington, DC (1818 H St. NW, Washington DC 20433): International Economic Dept., World Bank, 1989.

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10

Eastland, Sam. The red coffin. London: Faber and Faber, 2011.

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11

The red coffin. London: Faber and Faber, 2011.

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12

Kanten, Rudolf F. van. Competitive interactions in agroforestry systems: Competitive interactions between Coffea arabica L. and fast-growing timber shade trees in Southern Costa Rica. Eschborn: GTZ, 2003.

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13

Peasants against the state: The politics of market control in Bugisu, Uganda, 1900-1983. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1987.

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14

Agricultural Price Policy and Export and Food Production in Cameroon: A Farming Systems Analysis of Pricing Policies.: The Case of Coffee-Based Farming Systems. Peter Lang Publishing, 1999.

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15

Agricultural Price Policy And Export And Food Production In Cameroon: A Farming Systems Analysis Of Pricing Policies : The Case Of Coffee-based Farming Systems (Development Economics and Policy, 14). Peter Lang Pub Inc, 1999.

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16

Thompson, Katrina Dyonne. Advertisement. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038259.003.0006.

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This chapter focuses on the common order for bondsmen and women to dance, act lively, and smile in the domestic slave trade. Through an analysis of the coffle, slave pen, and auction block experiences of slaves, the chapter reveals the reasons why music and dance often were incorporated into the complex system of the domestic slave trade. It examines how performing coffles functioned as public advertisements for not only planters but also those hoping to achieve planter status. It considers the manner in which these singing and dancing coffles positively promoted the institution of slavery to non-slaveholders. It shows that the coffle served as an organized transportation network of slaves to the auction block within the interstate slave trade. While slave coffle scenes represented to whites a justification of their enslavement of blacks, they represented an avenue of agency for blacks. Dance and music also publicly presented the racial hierarchy of the time.
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17

Alcott, William A., and Kate Jackson. Tea and Coffee: Their Physical, Intellectual and Moral Effect on the Human System and Are They Injurious? Some Substitutes for Both. Kessinger Publishing, 2006.

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18

Eastland, Sam. Red Coffin. Faber & Faber, Limited, 2011.

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19

Hoffmann, Michael P., Carrie Koplinka-Loehr, and Danielle L. Eiseman. Our Changing Menu. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501754623.001.0001.

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This book unpacks the increasingly complex relationships between food and climate change. Whether you're a chef, baker, distiller, restaurateur, or someone who simply enjoys a good pizza or drink, it's time to come to terms with how climate change is affecting our diverse and interwoven food system. The book offers an eye-opening journey through a complete menu of before-dinner drinks and salads; main courses and sides; and coffee and dessert. Along the way, the book examines the escalating changes occurring to the flavors of spices and teas, the yields of wheat, the vitamins in rice, and the price of vanilla. The story is rounded out with a primer on the global food system, the causes and impacts of climate change, and what we can all do. The book is a celebration of food and a call to action—encouraging readers to join with others from the common ground of food to help tackle the greatest challenge of our time.
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20

Slenes, Robert W. Brazil. Edited by Mark M. Smith and Robert L. Paquette. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199227990.013.0006.

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This article reviews scholarship on the history and historiography of slavery in Brazil. Brazil possessed a more varied slave economy with a much larger sector producing for the internal market than scholars had previously thought. The already large slave population of Minas Gerais increased dramatically from 168,543 in 1819 to 381,893 in 1872. Minas Gerais consisted of an intricate mercantile system based on slave labour that not only supplied foreign markets with hides, tobacco, and the products of a revived mining and incipient coffee sector, but also satisfied the domestic demand of Minas and of the rapidly growing Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo plantation complex for cheese, hogs, cattle, and homespun cotton cloth. An elite group of merchants in the ports — often descendants of representatives of Portuguese mercantile houses who had married into large landowning and slaveholding families — came to dominate Brazil's trade with Africa as well as its coastal commerce.
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21

COLLON, MICHEL. PLANETE MALADE. 7 LECONS DU CORONA OU L'URGENCE DE REPENSER LE SYSTEME COFFRET 2 TOMES. INVESTIG ACTION, 2020.

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22

Boske, Leigh B., and John C. Cuttino. The Impacts of U.S.-Latin American Trade Corridors on the Southwest¬s Economy and Transportation System: Case Studies of Coffee and Steel on the U.S.-Brazil Trade Corridor. Univ Texas at Austin Lyndon B, 2002.

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23

Alborn, Timothy. All That Glittered. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190603519.001.0001.

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From the early eighteenth century into the 1830s, Great Britain was the only major country in the world to adopt gold as the sole basis of its currency, in the process absorbing much of the world’s supply of that metal into its pockets, cupboards, and coffers. During the same period, Britons forged a nation by distilling a heady brew of Protestantism, commerce, and military might, while preserving important features of its older social hierarchy. All That Glittered argues for a close connection between these occurrences, by linking justifications for gold’s role in British society—starting in the 1750s and running through the mid-nineteenth century gold rushes in California and Australia—to contemporary descriptions of that metal’s varied values at home and abroad. Most of these accounts attributed British commercial and military success to a credit economy pinned on gold, stigmatized southern European and subaltern peoples for their nonmonetary uses of gold, or tried to marginalize people at home for similar forms of alleged misconduct. This book tells a primarily cultural origin story about the gold standard’s emergence after 1850 as an international monetary system, while providing a new window on British exceptionalism during the previous century.
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24

CALDWELL, Misty. Notebook: Coffee and Kilos Work Out Inspiration Instructor Retro College Ruled Medium Lined Journal Note Taking System for School and University for Boys Girls Kids Teens Back to School and Home College Writing Notes 6x9. Independently Published, 2020.

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25

Business Plans Handbook : A Compilation of Actual Business Plans Developed by Small Businesses Throughout North America. Gale Cengage, 2000.

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26

Shaibani, Aziz. Pseudoneurologic Syndromes. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190661304.003.0022.

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The term functional has almost replaced psychogenic in the neuromuscular literature for two reasons. It implies a disturbance of function, not structural damage; therefore, it defies laboratory testing such as MRIS, electromyography (EMG), and nerve conduction study (NCS). It is convenient to draw a parallel to the patients between migraine and brain tumors, as both cause headache, but brain MRI is negative in the former without minimizing the suffering of the patient. It is a “software” and not a “hardware” problem. It avoids irritating the patient by misunderstanding the word psychogenic which to many means “madness.”The cause of this functional impairment may fall into one of the following categories:• Conversion reaction: conversion of psychological stress to physical symptoms. This may include paralysis, hemisensory or distal sensory loss, or conversion spasms. It affects younger age groups.• Somatization: chronic multiple physical and cognitive symptoms due to chronic stress. It affects older age groups.• Factions disorder: induced real physical symptoms due to the need to be cared for, such as injecting oneself with insulin to produce hypoglycemia.• Hypochondriasis: overconcern about body functions such as suspicion of ALS due to the presence of rare fasciclutations that are normal during stress and after ingestion of a large amount of coffee. Medical students in particular are targets for this disorder.The following points are to be made on this topic. FNMD should be diagnosed by neuromuscular specialists who are trained to recognize actual syndrome whether typical or atypical. Presentations that fall out of the recognition pattern of a neuromuscular specialist, after the investigations are negative, they should be considered as FNMDs. Sometimes serial examinations are useful to confirm this suspicion. Psychatrists or psychologists are to be consulted to formulate a plan to discover the underlying stress and to treat any associated psychiatric disorder or psychological aberration. Most patients think that they are stressed due to the illness and they fail to connect the neuromuscular manifestations and the underlying stress. They offer shop around due to lack of satisfaction, especially those with somatization disorders. Some patients learn how to imitate certain conditions well, and they can deceive health care professionals. EMG and NCS are invaluable in revealing FNMD. A normal needle EMG of a weak muscles mostly indicates a central etiology (organic or functional). Normal sensory responses of a severely numb limb mean that a lesion is preganglionic (like roots avulsion, CISP, etc.) or the cause is central (a doral column lesion or functional). Management of FNMD is difficult, and many patients end up being chronic cases that wander into clinics and hospitals seeking solutions and exhausting the health care system with unnecessary expenses.It is time for these disorders to be studied in detail and be classified and have criteria set for their diagnosis so that they will not remain diagnosed only by exclusion. This chapter will describe some examples of these disorders. A video clip can tell the story better than many pages of writing. Improvement of digital cameras and electronic media has improved the diagnosis of these conditions, and it is advisable that patients record some of their symptoms when they happen. It is not uncommon for some Neuromuscular disorders (NMDs), such as myasthenia gravis (MG), small fiber neuropathy, and CISP, to be diagnosed as functional due to the lack of solid physical findings during the time of the examination. Therefore, a neuromuscular evaluation is important before these disorders are labeled as such. Some patients have genuine NMDs, but the majority of their symptoms are related to what Joseph Marsden called “sickness behavior.” A patient with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) may unconsciously develop numbness of the entire side of the body because he thinks that he may have a stroke.
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