Academic literature on the topic 'Corne de l’Afrique'
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Journal articles on the topic "Corne de l’Afrique"
Lisimo Alingi, Augustin, and Christelle Bolinga Mitimiti. "Impact de l’autorité Intergouvernementale pour le Développement sur la Paix dans la Corne de l’Afrique : Etude menée de 1986 à 2014." Revue Congolaise des Sciences et Technologies 01, no. 01 (June 10, 2022): 14–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.59228/rcst.022.v1.i1.02.
Full textKaneko, Morie. "Pratiques potières dans la Corne de l’Afrique." Techniques & culture, no. 60 (June 19, 2013): 202–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/tc.6973.
Full textGutherz, Xavier. "Quel Néolithique dans la Corne de l’Afrique ?" Archéo-Nil. Revue de la société pour l'étude des cultures prépharaoniques de la vallée du Nil 23, no. 1 (2013): 73–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/arnil.2013.1059.
Full textMarchal, Roland. "Mitterrand, Djibouti et la Corne de l’Afrique." Politique africaine 58, no. 1 (1995): 65–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/polaf.1995.5875.
Full textMantoux, Stéphane. "Quand l’URSS intervenait dans la Corne de l’Afrique." Revue Historique des Armées 276, no. 2 (January 2, 2014): 93–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rha.276.0093.
Full textAhmed, Abiy. "Amener la paix dans la Corne de l’Afrique." SAY N° 4, no. 2 (April 1, 2021): 114–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/say.004.0114.
Full textPérouse de Montclos, Marc-Antoine. "Les États et la paysannerie de l’Afrique sahélienne au défi du jihad et du banditisme rural." Questions internationales 115, no. 5 (September 13, 2022): 78–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/quin.115.0078.
Full textTamru, Bezunesh, and Amina Saïd Chiré. "Citadinités dans les villes de la Corne de l’Afrique." Annales d'Ethiopie 32, no. 1 (2018): 11–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ethio.2018.1644.
Full textGutherz, Xavier. "Premières sociétés de production dans la Corne de l’Afrique." Les Nouvelles de l'archéologie, no. 120-121 (September 1, 2010): 89–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/nda.1014.
Full textLe Gouriellec, Sonia. "Chine, Éthiopie, Djibouti : un triumvirat pour la Corne de l’Afrique ?" Études internationales 49, no. 3 (May 23, 2019): 523–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1059934ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Corne de l’Afrique"
Solis, Teresa. "Les écrivains italophones de la Corne de l’Afrique : mobilité, mémoire et recomposition identitaire." Thesis, Paris 10, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PA100042.
Full textSince the beginning of the 1990’s, Italian literary world and critic have been interested in linguistic, esthetic and social issues generated by Italian immigrant literature, in which we find writers of various backgrounds.Nevertheless, there is a group of authors displaying distinctive features whose members originate from the Horn of Africa. Their literary works participate to a renewal of interest for Italian colonial domination as well as for the debate on the introduction of postcolonial theories and the existence of a so-called Italian postcolonialism. Conversely, the interest and the development of postcolonial studies promote authors’ writings.Italian colonial domination in East Africa was rejected and hidden for a long time and still today it is a difficult issue to deal with. How can authors express their sense of belonging to former colonies in a country that has never looked at its colonial past? Our thesis statement is that writing enables the authors to restore understanding to often contradictory identities and thus rebuild their own space, both with regard to their social and ethnic background and to Italian society where these operations take place.This work aims at exploring how writing stories represents a strategy intended to make identity reorganization possible. The analysis of their favorite subjects will allow us to show whether this reorganization also conveys an unprecedented imaginary world from the Horn of Africa or if the necessity of finding a space to exist prevails over this really innovative storytelling
Le, Gouriellec Sonia. "Régionalisme, régionalisation des conflits et construction de l'État : l'équation sécuritaire de la Corne de l’Afrique." Thesis, Paris 5, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013PA05D015.
Full textIn spite of its analytical complexity, the security context in the Horn of Africa may be submitted to the Political Science’ tools in order to better understand the complex interactions between the various actors. The present research thus seeks to analyze the mechanism underlying what appears as an unsolvable security problem: is regionalism a prerequisite for the emergence of a regional peace? In order to answer this question, it is necessary to understand the role of regional security processes (regionalization and regionalism) in the state formation and state building of the Horn of Africa’s states. This study endeavours to explore the interactions between regionalism, which are inherent in the creation of an African peace and security architecture, the regionalization of conflict, which seems at work in this area, and construction/formation state process. The relationship between the three terms of this equation depends on the context and interactions between the various entities that make up the region (states, non-state actors that stand against them or negotiate with the states and external actors). This study thus reveals two kinds of dynamics at play: an endogenous process and an exogenous one. In the first one conflicts are involved in the formation of the state and are largely internal conflicts. It demonstrates that there is a crisis in the state States dominate the regionalism process which tries to regulate regional conflit with relative success because regional organizations seek to strengthen or rebuild the state according to the idealized criteria of the Weberian State seen as a source of instability. The exogenous process is characterized by the role of regional conflicts whose very existence serves to justify the development and the strenghtening of regionalism thus perceived as the most appropriate answer to those security problems. States are the source of conflicts because they are perceived as weak. Regionalism would strengthen states and reduce the inclination of states to make war
Sebban-Bécache, Anne-Sophie. "Représentations et politiques d’Israël vis-à-vis de la Corne de l’Afrique : au cœur d’une région stratégique, quelle permanence de la relation spéciale avec l’Éthiopie ?" Thesis, Paris 8, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA080080/document.
Full textThis thesis explores the permanency of the special relationship between Israel and Ethiopia, studied through a geopolitical lens of two regions: the Middle East and the Horn of Africa. From biblical accounts of the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon’s union, to the particularities of Christianity in Ethiopia, Israel and Ethiopia share significant historical, social, and religious ties, as well as similar perceptions and representations of their longstanding relationship and connection to the “Holy Land.” The Bétä Esraél, Ethiopia’s indigenous Jewish community, rediscovered in the 19th century and later recognized by the community of Jews in 1973, adds a unique dimension to the modern-day Israel-Ethiopia relationship. Nonetheless, the integration of Ethiopian Jewry into Israeli society, combined with the influx of refugees from the Horn of Africa, raise a number of existential questions, including Israel’s policies toward development in Africa, which is evidenced by strong representations of Jewish values and Zionism, as well as challenging contradictions (e.g. representing a model democracy versus the difficulty in assuming a unique national destiny or exclusive identity). Due to the strategic importance of the Horn of Africa, particularly its close proximity and access to the Red Sea, Israel targeted Ethiopia in the 1950’s as the country to help break its isolation. Even today, Ethiopia continues to play a prominent role in Israel’s ambitions on the continent; the analysis on conflicts and the balance of power in the region give rise to new intersecting challenges, which requires Israel to put Ethiopia into perspective and favor a more comprehensive regional approach to the relationship
Djama, Said Ared. "La femme dans la littérature d'expression française de la Corne de l'Afrique." Thesis, Dijon, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012DIJOL015.
Full textIn the Horn of Africa French-speaking literature, there are very often the caricatured images of female characters who are engaged in a difficult daily life. In both texts Waberi and Nuruddin Farah, female characters are constantly on the run to escape the tragic fate of a painful existence where moral and material/financial poverty is a major obstacle. If one of the factors that tends the female characters towards effective marginalization is related to a cantankerous space, dominated “by the vicious will of an imperial Sun”, there are also others who are contributing to stifle their identity in a traditional environment where "anything out of the herd is the elsewhere, the unknown distance, the limbo of oblivion”. We integrate this essentially misogynist perception in a critical size where marginalization related to exploration of the female body in” the nights in Addis Ababa takes shape over the narrative through exploitation the sexual rites that is graved in the flesh of female characters as” a surface where society registers the various terms of transaction”. This present thesis questions initially on issues related to the gender issue in the novelistic universe of writers while taking into account the popular imagination on the representations of women in the Horn of Africa
Houssein, Isman Oumar. "Les représentations de la guerre dans l'espace littéraire francophone : le cas de la Corne de l'Afrique." Thesis, Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017UBFCH001.
Full textThe war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to define the relationship they have with the language they practices when it does not metamorphose themselves. It is this sense that need dealing with the range of transgressions at work in the war story which, through formal and language disorders distortions that contribute to its development, inaugurates writing that escapes definitions categorizations. Instead of reporting on the disaster, the literary imagination is in an external object, searching the paradoxical experience aestheticisation a priori ineffable a way around the impotence of language to express the inexpressible. Nevertheless, he digs through this gap with referential reality. Suffice to say that the war introduced a divide between the subject and the world, a gap that must be overcome so that can again keep a coherent discourse
Obsieh, Moussa Souleiman. "L'oralité dans la littérature de la Corne de l'Afrique : traditions orales, formes et mythologies de la littérature pastorale, marques de l'oralité dans la littérature." Thesis, Dijon, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012DIJOL016/document.
Full textThe Horn of Africa has a traditional oral literature which is rich and varied as the rest of the continent, starting from pastoral mythology to poetry, legend and storytelling. But with the social upheaval which occurred with the arrival of European settlers and the introduction of writing, the chain of transmission of the oral tradition is threatened. Many Europeans have sought to describe the habits and customs of these people. Whereas on the other hand, the writers from the Horn of Africa are often inspired by giving it (orality) and a new way of doing it. The following research work strives to reflect traditional forms of orality and their impact on modern literature
Lauret, Alexandre. "L'âge d'or du trafic de migrants à Djibouti : marge, passeurs et intégration régionale dans la Corne de l'Afrique et la péninsule Arabique." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 8, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022PA080021.
Full textThis thesis presents an analysis of migrant smuggling between the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula from the viewpoint of Djiboutian smugglers. Empirical data was collected from interviews with smugglers and from smuggling observations and its consequences in Djibouti. The objective of this research is to understand how the development of this illicit activity is connected with the process of marginalization of the Afars of the North of Djibouti. On the one hand, this population see themselves as marginalized by the Government because of historical, political and socioeconomic factors, on the other hand, the process of marginalisation provides a windfall effect in the regional geography through the connexion of smugglers in four countries: Ethiopia, Djibouti, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Recounting the smuggler’ “saga” allows for an explanation of the root causes of the ascent of this illicit activity. Moreover, the marginalisation narrative promotes smuggling as a legitimate and lucrative career opportunity in Northern Djibouti. This normalisation leads to a tacit acceptance by the local society. Looking at compromises, negotiations and mutual adaptations to scale changes, from the City to the State, performed by smugglers, this thesis sets out to understand how these stakeholders shape their environment to perpetuate their migrant smuggling activities. As a result, migrant smuggling becomes a dynamic and relational phenomenon which leads us to see margins as spaces of hybridisation of legal and illegal activities, thereby creating new power dynamics
Jolly, Laurent. "Le tirailleur somali : le métier des armes instrumentalisé (début XXe siècle - fin des années 60)." Thesis, Pau, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013PAUU1009/document.
Full textThis study is about the recruits of the French army in Djibouti, from the First World war until the sixties. Because of their scarce numbers, compared with those from other parts of the African empire, their part in world conflicts is less known. Though, contrary to what went on in other French colonies, the enlistments were all voluntary and many of the enlisted were not from Djibouti. So, they seem to have been mercenaries hired for operations abroad thus strengthening their image as warriors in the eyes of the people in the area, especially the Somali who enlisted the most. The study is based on the French archives, particularly on the personal records of over 1300 “tirailleurs” representing a quarter of the enlistments during the most significant years. This statistical approach, completed with field work, allows us to study these enlistments from a social point of view and reveals motivations quite different from the clichés still widely spread in the western world as well as among the population of the Horn. This double point of view, quantitative and micro-historical, reveals the motivations of these young men enlisted in a colonial army, regional migration movements, their individual strategies in relation with the socio-economical context in the Horn marked by food crisis, political insecurity and the decline of pastoralism. Being used as instruments by a colonial power like many other Africans during the several conflicts in which they took part, these temporary warriors never forgot their own interests which they attempted to conciliate with the colonial domination. Their often short stay with the French army was for many reasons an experience, a sort of step into modernity. This study attempts to measure this otherness particularly through individual and familial paths. Even though they were cultural go-betweens, the colonizing power tried to use them in the context of decolonization. In that case, the army produced new notabilities and attempt to win the loyalty of its ex-servicemen. But then, again, the different individuals adopted postures far more complex than they seem to be, their faithfulness never overstepping their personal interest. The profession of arms was thus used at a private level, but also in the new political world after 1945
Isman, Oumar Houssein. "Les représentations de la guerre dans l'espace littéraire francophone : le cas de la Corne de l'Afrique." Thesis, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017UBFCH001/document.
Full textThe war is an experience that, by its commotion, condemned to unspeakable. It forces writers to define the relationship they have with the language they practices when it does not metamorphose themselves. It is this sense that need dealing with the range of transgressions at work in the war story which, through formal and language disorders distortions that contribute to its development, inaugurates writing that escapes definitions categorizations. Instead of reporting on the disaster, the literary imagination is in an external object, searching the paradoxical experience aestheticisation a priori ineffable a way around the impotence of language to express the inexpressible. Nevertheless, he digs through this gap with referential reality. Suffice to say that the war introduced a divide between the subject and the world, a gap that must be overcome so that can again keep a coherent discourse
Books on the topic "Corne de l’Afrique"
Fauvelle-Aymar, François-Xavier, and Bertrand Hirsch, eds. Espaces musulmans de la Corne de l’Afrique au Moyen Âge. Centre français des études éthiopiennes, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.cfee.698.
Full textBook chapters on the topic "Corne de l’Afrique"
Calafat, Guillaume. "Un réseau corse entre l’Afrique du Nord et l’Europe. Commerce maritime, institutions et enrichissement au tournant des XVIe et XVIIe siècles." In Atti delle «Settimane di Studi» e altri Convegni, 407–27. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6453-857-0.21.
Full textBecker, Charles, Roland Colin, Liliane Daronian, and Claude-Hélène Perrot. "Pour un socialisme des peuples dans la Corne de l’Afrique." In Relire Yves Person, 359–81. Éditions Présence Africaine, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/epa.becke.2015.01.0359.
Full textClapham, Christopher, and Hélène Arnaud. "16. Guerre et construction de l’État dans la Corne de l’Afrique." In Guerres et sociétés, 463. Editions Karthala, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/kart.hassne.2003.01.0463.
Full textBrun, Matthieu. "Chapitre 9. Géopolitique de l’agrifirme de la péninsule arabique à la corne de l’Afrique." In Le nouveau capitalisme agricole, 255–74. Presses de Sciences Po, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/scpo.purse.2017.01.0255.
Full textReports on the topic "Corne de l’Afrique"
Mballa, Charles, Josephine Ngebeh, Machtelt De Vriese, Katie Drew, Abigayil Parr, and Chi-Chi Undie. Pratiques du HCR et de ses partenaires en matière de protection communautaire dans les secteurs dans la région de l’Afrique de l’Est, de la Corne de l’Afrique et des Grands Lacs. Population Council, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh14.1053.
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