Academic literature on the topic 'Kabylia (Algeria)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Kabylia (Algeria)"

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LAMINE, SMAIL, ABDELKADER LOUNACI, and NARD BENNAS. "Biodiversity and chorology of aquatic beetles (Coleoptera: Elmidae and Hydraenidae) in Kabylia (central-north Algeria). New records and updates." Zootaxa 4700, no. 1 (November 18, 2019): 102–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4700.1.5.

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This work presents a list of water beetles of the families Hydraenidae and Elmidae occurring in Kabylia (central-north of Algeria) based on an exhaustive review of literature (1872–2016) and on more than 2126 individuals collected during field campaigns (2013–2015). Twenty-five species belonging to nine genera of Hydraenidae and Elmidae are here recorded from a total of 25 sites. Ochthebius (Ochthebius) bifoveolatus Waltl, 1835 is here recorded for the first time from Algeria; Hydraena leprieuri, Limnebius pilicauda, and Limnius intermedius are new records for Kabylia. A biogeographical analysis shows that the Hydraenidae and Elmidae from Kabylia are essentially Mediterranean (80%) and Palaearctic (20%) elements. Elements with wider distributions are absent.
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Hamitouche, Souad, Abdelouhab Bouchareb, and Abdelazize Franck Bougaham. "Status and distribution of the Algerian Nuthatch’s population (Sitta ledanti Vielliard, 1976) in the Tamentout forest (north-eastern Algeria)." Avian Biology Research 13, no. 4 (August 14, 2020): 81–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1758155920945842.

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The Algerian Nuthatch ( Sitta ledanti) is the only endemic bird species in Algeria. It is located in the Kabylia of Babors (north-eastern Algeria). It is classified as an endangered species by IUCN and its populations are decreasing. In this study, we are interested in the inventory of the number of Sitta ledanti’s individuals in the Tamentout forest, carried out by the EFP method along line-transect, during the 2019’s breeding period. It turned out that this forest contains the largest population ever recorded. It is estimated at 187 individuals for an area of 9688 ha. The Tamentout forest is under severe human pressure from adjoining houses, including illegal logging and overgrazing, causing disturbance of the Algerian Nuthatch’s habitat and reduction of its distribution area.
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Sahar, O., V. Leone, H. Limani, N. Rabia, and R. Meddour. "Wildfire risk and its perception in Kabylia (Algeria)." iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry 11, no. 3 (June 30, 2018): 367–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3832/ifor2546-011.

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Touati, Samia. "Lalla Fatma N’Soumer (1830–1863): Spirituality, Resistance and Womanly Leadership in Colonial Algeria." Societies 8, no. 4 (December 11, 2018): 126. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/soc8040126.

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Lalla Fatma N’Soumer (1830–1863) is one of the major heroines of Algerian resistance to the French colonial enterprise in the region of Kabylia. Her life and personality have been surrounded by myths and mysteries. Although her name is mentioned in colonial chronicles recording the conquest of Algeria, her exact role in leading a movement of local resistance to the French army doesn’t seem to be very clear. This paper aims at shedding light on this exceptional Berber woman through the analysis of French colonial sources describing these military campaigns—despite their obvious bias—and later secondary sources. This paper focuses on the spiritual dimension which has been somehow overlooked in the existing literature. It precisely describes her family background whereby her ancestry goes back to a marabout lineage affiliated with the Raḥmāniyya sufi order. It argues that her level of education in spiritual and religious matters was probably higher than what had been so far assumed. This article discusses how this spiritual aspect helps explain the tremendous popularity she enjoyed among her people in Kabylia, where she has been considered almost a saint.
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Scheele, Judith. "A Taste for Law: Rule-Making in Kabylia (Algeria)." Comparative Studies in Society and History 50, no. 4 (September 23, 2008): 895–919. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417508000388.

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There has recently been an upsurge in anthropologists' interest in law, with North Africa and the Middle East taking a prominent position. One of the foci is the coexistence of multiple sets of legal practices, and the ways in which people negotiate between different legal “systems.” This emphasis closely mirrors the more general shift in anthropology from “discourse” to “practice,” and shares both its strengths and weaknesses. Among the latter is that the resulting emphasis on “legal pluralism” (Griffith 1986) runs the danger of eroding the concept of law as such, subsuming it within more general and all-encompassing notions of “conflict resolution.” Similarly, there is a risk that one of the most striking aspects of legal procedure, namely the value placed on the act of making rules, is being neglected, and the actual content of local law codes and their underlying principles are receiving less attention than they deserve. As a result, “customary law” is more often implicitly defined by what it is not. Here, my aim is not to shift the focus from “practice” to “discourse,” but rather to understand the internal logic of one such set of ‘customs,’ and to consider the act of making law in itself as a special kind of practice (see also Comaroff and Roberts 1981: 15–16).
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Tahir, D., S. Alwassouf, A. Loudahi, B. Davoust, and R. N. Charrel. "Seroprevalence of Toscana virus in dogs from Kabylia (Algeria)." Clinical Microbiology and Infection 22, no. 3 (March 2016): e16-e17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmi.2015.10.029.

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Kechemir, Lina Hanane, Michel Sartori, and Abdelkader Lounaci. "An unexpected new species of Habrophlebia from Algeria (Ephemeroptera, Leptophlebiidae)." ZooKeys 953 (July 27, 2020): 31–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.953.51244.

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We describe a new species of Habrophlebia, H. djurdjurensissp. nov., based on nymphal, imaginal, and egg stages obtained by sampling from the Great Kabylia watershed, north-central Algeria. The new species was previously identified as H. cf. fusca by Lounaci et al. 2000. Habrophlebia djurdjurensis is in fact more related to H. vaillantorum Thomas, 1996 but can be separated by characters on the nymphs and male imago. This is the fourth species of Habrophlebia reported from North Africa.
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Hachour, K., N. Talmat-Chaouchi, and R. Moulaï. "Diversity and Structure of Nesting Birds in the Coastal Riparian Zones of Great Kabylia in Algeria." Zoodiversity 55, no. 4 (2021): 351–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/zoo2021.04.351.

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The study of the nesting birds of the coastal riparian zones in Great Kabylia in Algeria, allowed us to identify 45 species of birds, belonging to 12 orders and 26 families. The richest site in terms of species is Takdempt (31 species). The lowest diversity is noted at the level of Boudouaou wadi with 16 species. The values of the Shannon-Weaver diversity index (H') for all sites are quite high (≥3 bits). Concerning the global abundance of avifauna, the site that represents the highest centesimal frequency is that of Takdempt (20.87 %) and this is due to the presence of a colony of Bubulcus ibis (Linnaeus, 1758). The bird communities of the sampled sites are not identical, but the degree of similarity, in general, is quite high (≥ 50 %). The main factors controlling the diversity and the structure of the avifauna of Great Kabylia coastal riparian zones are represented by vertical and horizontal vegetation structure
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DJENNOUNE, DALILA, FAIZA MARNICHE, MANSOUR AMROUN, and RAPHAËL BOULAY. "Comparative diet of hedgehogs (Atelerix algirus) in two localities in Kabylia, Algeria." TURKISH JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY 42, no. 2 (March 21, 2018): 207–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.3906/zoo-1705-51.

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Goodman, Jane E. "The Half-Lives of Texts: Poetry, Politics, and Ethnography in Kabylia, Algeria." Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 12, no. 2 (December 2002): 157–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jlin.2002.12.2.157.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Kabylia (Algeria)"

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Maas, Lucy Gabrielle. "Moral homelands : localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:ca46f9d7-eda1-4932-a6ea-fc2c07efe88a.

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This thesis is a study of attitudes to regional and national identity in Kabylia, a Berber-speaking region in northeast Algeria, and among Kabyle migrants in Paris. I illustrate how Kabyles nurture a fragile balance of nationalism and regional particularism through a primarily moral notion of local community, and extend it to an alternative vision for an Algerian nation which they believe has been debased by a corrupt state regime and Arabo-Islamic ideology since national independence. The thesis is based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork divided between two places – Paris and a large village in Kabylia – and reflects my interest in how people ‘imagine’ national community through their experience as members of smaller social groups. Many Kabyle activists today formulate an alternative vision of Algerian national politics as a federation of several regionally based affective communities, each maintaining internal solidarity. This echoes a tendency in French colonial writings on Kabylia, discussed in the opening chapter, to conceive of the region as an island, intensively connected yet defensive of its autonomy. As citizens of the existing Algerian state, many Kabyles contest assimilation by claiming to represent Algeria’s ‘true past’, and investing contemporary governance initiatives with its values. They represent the radical difference that this implies with metaphors of the Kabyle community as a family within ‘public’ national life, and accuse the state regime of reversing this relationship by adopting a language of coercive authority appropriate only within the family. The transmission of Kabyle values today relies heavily on music, and especially political song, which I demonstrate – beyond its role in disseminating dissident ideas – acts as a vehicle for a type of secular revealed knowledge widely seen as the purest embodiment of Kabyle morality. Beyond the hollow rhetoric of Western liberalism that some see in Kabyle activism, I set out to demonstrate that the particular narrative of identity that I examine, in stressing regional uniqueness at the expense of recognition from a centralized state, also reflects anomalies inherent in the concept of ‘nationalism’ itself as a compromise between the requirements of external co-operation and internal allegiance.
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Scheele, Judith. "Village matters : the economy of ideas in Kabylia (north-eastern Algeria)." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.424718.

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Mirza, Naeem Ashraf, Adda Hocine, and Abu Helaleh Riad. "The emergence of transnational terrorist safe havens: a comparative analysis of the federally administered tribal areas in Pakistan and Kabylia in Algeria." Thesis, Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10945/27873.

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This thesis analyzes the similarities and unique conditions that have made the FATA and Kabylia safe havens for transnational terrorist groups. The thesis uses five variables to compare the cases geography, governance, society, security, and outside influences on both areas. The thesis finds that geography has a strong influence on the creation of safe havens, particularly terrain that is difficult to access, as does weak federal governance and strong tribal societies. Furthermore, both Kabylia and the FATA have suffered chronic instability, which has provided opportunities for terrorists to establish safe havens. External influences have also played an important role in both areas by creating competing loyalties that have weakened the legitimacy of the federal government in the area, thus helping to create favorable conditions for terrorist safe havens. Socioeconomic conditions were not a consistent cause of safe havens in this study, nor was the presence of international borders. These findings suggest that improving communications infrastructure in places like the FATA and Kabylia is an important first step in making these areas less hospitable to terrorist organizations, as is improved infrastructure, especially roads, that grant access to security forces in these areas.
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Chouiref, Fatiha. "La question amazighe en Algérie : le passage d’une revendication culturelle et linguistique au pouvoir politique." Thesis, Pau, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018PAUU2043/document.

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Cette thèse porte sur la structure interne et les relations extérieures du berbérisme en Algérie, et le passage de cette tendance d’une revendication culturelle et linguistique à des demandes politiques autonomistes, au nom de l’amazighité du pays et l’antériorité de l’existence du peuple Amazigh sur son territoire. Ce peuple autochtone, présent dans tous les pays de l’Afrique du Nord, l’Afrique subsaharienne et dans les îles Canaries, jouit d’une particularité dans l’épreuve algérienne. En effet, la mobilisation berbériste est passée d’une revendication pour plus de valorisation culturelle et linguistique à une protestation politique qui ambitionne l’autonomie, voir l’autodétermination de la région de Kabylie.Afin d’arriver à une explication objective et épistémologique de la spécificité berbère en Algérie, incarnée essentiellement par la composante kabyle, nous procédons à un tour d’horizon de la situation des Amazighs dans les pays du Maghreb, dans une approche comparative qui nous aidera à comprendre l’enjeu de l’amazighité dans le passé et le présent. Nous avons opté pour la comparaison, car nous partons du principe que les sciences humaines et sociales ont construit leur perception scientifique du monde à travers des paradigmes et des branches comparatifs : politique comparée, droit comparé, sociologie comparée, etc. Nous estimons également que la comparaison s’impose aujourd’hui comme une nécessité pour comprendre les réalités politiques et sociales. Cet apport, initié en grande partie par Emile Durkheim, a fait de la comparaison un des mécanismes indispensables des études découlant des sciences humaines et sociales.Les travaux sur les droits des minorités et des peuples autochtones gagnent davantage du terrain dans les sciences humaines et sociales. La pertinence de ce champ d’étude est remarquable dans sa pluridisciplinarité. En conséquence, l’étude de chaque peuple requiert la fusion de toutes les principales mentions en sciences humaines et sociales. Des mentions à la fois distinctes et complémentaires. L’ouverture d’une analyse dans le cadre d’une discipline donnée est forcément susceptible d’orienter le travail du chercheur vers d’autres spécialités, étudiant divers aspects de la réalité humaine sur le plan de l'individu et sur le plan collectif.Notre travail d’analyse politico-juridique, qui nécessite un traitement pluridisciplinaire, comporte des aperçus historiques, ainsi que des notions économiques, géographiques, ethnologiques, sociologique et anthropologiques, jugées nécessaires pour une meilleure compréhension du cas algérien
This doctoral thesis focuses on the internal structure and external relations of the Berber Identity Movement in Algeria, and the transition from a cultural and linguistic claim to autonomic and political demands. The Berber militants want to approve the precedence of the existence of the Amazigh people on its territory. These indigenous peoples are present in all the countries of North Africa, sub-Saharan Africa and the Canary Islands. The Algerian Berbers are different. Indeed, the Berber mobilization, especially the Berbers of Kabylia, moved from a claim of increasing the value of their culture and language to a political protest which aspires to autonomy and selfdetermination of the Kabylia area.To achieve to an objective and epistemological explanation of the Berber specificity in Algeria, we will analyze the Amazigh’s situation in Maghreb countries. We will use a comparative approach that will help us to understand the Amazigh’s challenge in the past and the present. We opted for comparison because we assume that the human and social sciences have constructed their scientific perception of the world through paradigms and comparative branches: comparative politics, comparative law, comparative sociology, etc. We also believe it’s important to compare to understand political and social realities. This idea, initiated by Emile Durkheim, has made comparison one of the indispensable mechanisms of humanities and social sciences.The studies on minorities and indigenous people’s rights are more present in the humanities and social sciences, with more multidisciplinary. We mean that the study of each minority or indigenous group requires a complementary fusion of all the humanities and social sciences fields, for a better comprehension of the individual and collective human realities.Our political-legal analysis, which requires a multidisciplinary treatment, includes historical insights, as well as economic, geographical, ethnological, sociological and anthropological notions, which are necessary for a better understanding of the Algerian and Berber identity question
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Saïdi, Karim. "Histoire des Kabyles et de la Kabylie pendant la guerre d'Algérie, 1954-1962 /." Saint-Quentin : K. Saïdi, 2005. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb40089353q.

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Chibani, Ali. "Temps clos et ruptures spatiales dans les œuvres du chanteur-poète kabyle Lounis Aït Menguellet et de l’écrivain francophone Tahar Djaout." Thesis, Paris 4, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA040026.

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Composée de cinq parties, notre étude commence par s’intéresser à la transcription du « retour de la violence » en Algérie dans les littératures orale et écrite qui refusent toute forme de nihilisme. Ce refus amène le poète-chanteur kabyle Lounis Aït Menguellet et l’écrivain francophone Tahar Djaout à ouvrir leur espace à l’altérité. C’est là que commencent les ruptures spatiales dans le texte poétique, qui alors éclate en plusieurs espaces insulaires. Mais la souffrance et l’angoisse de la mort sont partout et marquent de leur présence l’espace textuel, par exemple en bouleversant l’organisation rimique. Le lecteur-auditeur se retrouve de nouveau dans un espace-temps fermé sur le Même. En effet, et à cause du manque des récits historiques en Algérie, les deux auteurs sont condamnés à inventer leur propre langage sacré et à léguer au groupe social des vestiges verbaux. Ces vestiges devraient aussi leur garantir l’immortalité du Nom. Notre dernière partie porte sur la position du poète dans une histoire de violence, son engagement littéraire et la continuité de cet engagement hors-texte
Composed of five parts, my outline starts with the algerian “historical return of violence” issue, as transcribed in both oral and written literatures, which rejects any nihilist position. Such a radical stance brings therefore the kabyle singer and poet Lounis Aït Menguellet as well the francophone novelist Tahar Djaout to open their inner space to otherness. From then on, the literary text can be defined as many island-shaped poetic space breaks. However, pain and fear of death remain, disrupting structures and rhymes organization within the text, so that space and time are closed. The decline of historical narrative in Algeria does actually lead the authors to forge their own verbal vestiges and sacred language; what should ensure the remaining/lasting of the Name. The last part of this work sheds light on the poet’s position towards a violent history, his presence as a protagonist within his texts, and his involvement in and out the literary field
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Lahlou, Abdelhak. "Poésie orale kabyle ancienne. Histoire sociale, Mémoire orale et création poétique." Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017EHES0113.

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Jusqu’au milieu du XXe siècle, la littérature kabyle fut essentiellement orale et s'exprimait principalement dans le genre poétique. Si les contes, les fables, les légendes et autres récits mythiques furent l'autre moyen par quoi les Kabyles exprimèrent leur génie, il reste que c’est la poésie qui fût la matrice de leur culture et le réceptacle de leur histoire. Plus qu’un art qui doit transfigurer le réel, la poésie kabyle a pour rôle de rendre ce réel, l’interpréter et le clarifier pour donner du sens aux événements historiques et politiques auxquels sont confrontés les hommes et les femmes de cette région. L’objet de notre recherche est de partir de la production poétique la plus ancienne telle qu’elle est arrivée à nous par les recueils de Adolphe Hanoteau (1867), Amar-Ou-Saïd Boulifa (1904), Belkacem Bensedira (1887), Jean Amrouche (1988) et la somme considérable établie par Mouloud Mammeri (1969, 1980, 1989) afin de scruter l’horizon culturel de la Kabylie et saisir, à travers l’étude les textes, l’homme dans son enracinement social et culturel
Until the middle of the twentieth century, Kabyle literature was essentially oral and was mainly expressed in the poetic genre. If tales, fables, legends and other mythical narratives were another way by which the Kabyle people expressed their genius, it remains that poetry was the matrix of their culture and the receptacle of their history. The Kabyle poetry, more than an art that has to transfigure reality, has the role of rendering this reality, interpreting it and clarifying it to give meaning to the historical and political events.The object of our research is to start from the earliest poetic production as it came to us by the collections of Adolphe Hanoteau (1867), Amar-Ou-Saïd Boulifa (1904), Belkacem Bensedira (1887) Jean Amrouche (1988) and the considerable sum established by Mouloud Mammeri (1969, 1980, 1989) in order to examine the cultural horizon of Kabylia through the study of its oral poetry
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Lahmar, Rabah. "Les sols rouges lessives sur micaschites a chlorites ferriferes (grande kabylie, algerie). Organisation de la couverture pedologique d'un bassin versant. Alteration, pedogenese, morphogenese." Paris 6, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA066339.

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La premiere partie traite de l'analyse structurale de cete couverture. La carte en courbe de differenciation est discutee : le contenant et le contenu sont analyses; la stabilite de l'information sturcturale et de l'image cartographique lors d'une reduction de la maille ou de l'echelle est abordee. Ainsi la differenciation pedologique est marquee par le transfert de l'argile. Le profil d'eluviation-illuviation est d'autant plus lateral et net que la pente est forte; l'hydrochimie se declenche a l'aval quand la porosite est colmatee par l'argile illuviale. En revanche, la distribution des horizons organiques superficiels est regie par l'erosion. La stabilite de cette couverture epaisse sous des conditions climatiques mediterraneennes agressives est reliee au developpement d'une importante microagregation. L'etude de la stabilite et de la constitution des differentes classes d'agregats montre le role du fer amorphe et de sa liaison avec les acides humiques dans le developpement et la perennite de cette microagregation. Le fer provient en grande partie de l'alteration des chlorites qui aboutit en meme temps a la formation de mineraux a comportement intergrade dont les cales interfoliaires sont essentiellement ferriferes. Deux voies d'approche ont ete suivies pour l'etude de ces mineraux : -l'extraction chimique des amorphes externes et internes et le suivi du comportement a la diffraction rx des argiles traitees : - l'etude de l'alteration des chlorites ferriferes par voie microanalytique
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Abbassene, Fatiha. "Contraintes chronologiques et pétro-géochimiques du magmatisme sur l'évolution pré-et post-collisionnelle de la marge algérienne : secteur de la Petite Kabylie." Thesis, Brest, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016BRES0028/document.

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L’activité magmatique miocène en Petite Kabylie s’exprime par la mise en place de roches plutoniques et volcaniques de composition majoritairement riche en K ainsi que moyennement riches en K. Ces roches forment des pointements dispersés sur près de 130 km le long de la marge méditerranéenne de l’Algérie. Dans les deux secteurs d’étude : la Kabylie de Collo et l’Ouest Edough-Cap de Fer, elles recoupent les empilements de nappes de socle et de flyschs crétacés et numidiens. De nouvelles datations U-Pb sur zircons et K-Ar sur roche totale et minéraux séparés ont permis de fixer à 17 Ma le début de l’activité magmatique post-collisionnelle à affinité calco-alcaline riche en K2O. Ces âges obtenus sur le batholithe granitique de Bougaroun (200 km2) sont les plus anciens jamais obtenus dans toute la Marge Méditerranéenne du Maghreb. L’activité magmatique s’étend vers l’Est et atteint la zone ouest-Edough-Cap de Fer vers ~16 Ma puis se poursuit de façon intermittente dans les deux secteurs d’étude à ~15 Ma, 14-13 Ma jusqu’à 11 Ma avec la mise en place de corps filoniens mafiques et felsiques en Kabylie de Collo. En outre, un âge oligocène supérieur (27.0 ± 3.0 Ma et 23.3 ± 3.2 Ma) a été mesuré par la méthode Ar/Ar sur amphiboles des gabbros à caractère océanique du Cap Bougaroun s.s (Kabylie de Collo). Les nouvelles données géochimiques et isotopiques ont permis de mettre en évidence deux sources pour le magmatisme dans les deux secteurs étudiés. Une première source mantellique appauvrie, non modifiée par un composant de subduction qui est à l’origine des gabbros à caractère océanique du Cap Bougaroun s.s et de Bou Maïza au Sud de l’Edough. Ceux-ci pourraient représenter des reliques du stade de rifting d’âge oligocène supérieur en prélude à l’ouverture en position arrière-arc du bassin algérien. Une deuxième source enrichie en terres rares légères et en éléments mobiles est représentée par le manteau lithosphérique subcontinental kabyle précédemment métasomatisé durant la subduction à vergence nord de la lithosphère océanique téthysienne au Paléogène. Les magmas mafiques enrichis en LREE issues de cette source ont ensuite évolué par cristallisation fractionnée et contamination crustale pour former les roches intermédiaires et felsiques de la marge est-algérienne. Nous proposons un modèle tectono-magmatique de rupture de slab téthysien associée à une délamination crustale au niveau des bordures des deux lithosphères continentales africaine et kabyle. A 17 Ma, le flux thermique d’origine asthénosphérique ascendant à travers la déchirure du slab téthysien induit la fusion du manteau téthysien. Les magmas mafiques calco-calcalins moyennement potassiques subissent des échanges chimiques avec le socle africain durant leur ascension à travers celui-ci, générant les magmas intermédiaires et felsiques calco-alcalins riches en K caractérisés par une importante signature crustale
The Miocene igneous activity in Lesser Kabylia includes a ~130 km-long EW-trending lineament that extends along the eastern Algerian margin from Kabylie de Collo to Ouest-Edough-Cap de Fer area. It includes mostly medium-K to High-K calc-alkaline plutonic and volcanic rocks. In the studied area, these magmatic rocks crosscut and/or overlie the inner zones of the Maghrebides represented by basement and Kabylian cretaceous and Numidian flyschs nappes. New U-Pb dating on zircons and K-Ar ages on whole rocks and separated minerals document a 17 Ma onset for the post-collisional K-rich calc-alkaline magmatism. These Upper Burdigalian ages obtained on the Bougaroun pluton are the oldest presently identified for Krich calc-alkaline rocks in the whole 1200 km-long EW trending magmatic belt located along the Mediterranean coast of Maghreb. However, according to new K-Ar ages, magmatic activity started in Ouest Edough zone at ~16 then persisted intermittently in the two studied areas at ~15.5 Ma, 14-13 Ma and stopped at ~11 Ma, with the emplacement of mafic and felsic dykes in Kabylie de Collo. In addition, we measured older (Upper Oligocene) Ar-Ar hornblende ages of 27.0 ± 3.0 Ma and 23.3 ± 3.2 Ma on LREE-depleted gabbros outcropping at Cap Bougaroun sensu stricto. According to our new geochemical and isotopic data, we distinguish two sources for magmatic rocks in the studied area: a depleted mantle source which could represent the ambient asthenosphere still not modified by the subduction processes at the time of emplacement of the Upper Oligocene LREE-depleted gabbros. The latter could be related to the Upper-Oligocene rifting before the back-arc crust formation in Algerian basin or to dyke systems or gabbroic intrusions crosscutting the stretched Kabylian continental crust. An enriched mantle source modified by a subduction component (melt or fluid) escaping from a northward-dipping subducted Tethyan oceanic lithosphere. The enriched mafic magmas are believed to come from this metasomatized mantle and are genetically related to the differentiated rocks through crystal fractionation and assimilation of large amounts of crustal lithologies, during their ascent through the African continental crust. We propose a tectono-magmatic model involving an Early Miocene Tethyan slab breakoff combined with delamination of the edges of the African and Kabylian continental lithospheres. At 17 Ma, the asthenospheric thermal flux upwelling through the slab tear induced the thermal erosion of the Kabylian lithospheric mantle metasomatized during the previous subduction event and triggered its partial melting. We attribute the strong trace element and isotopic crustal signature of Bougaroun felsic rocks to extensive interactions between ascending mafic melts and the African crust underthrust beneath the Kabylie de Collo basement
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10

Aïte, Mohamed Ouramdane. "Analyse de la microfracturation et paléo-contraintes dans la néogène post-nappes de grande kabylie (Algerie)." Le Mans, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994LEMA1001.

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L'etude detaillee de la fracturation et des paleocontraintes, basees sur l'analyse de mesures de plans stries affectant les formations post-nappes de grande kabylie (algerie) a proximite de la ligne de suture des plaques afrique et europe, permet l'identification de cinq periodes tectoniques principales dans l'orogene central des maghrebides, apres les phases de subduction et de collision entre les deux plaques et apres l'arrivee des nappes gravitaires au burdigalien dans les zones internes. La premiere est une periode distensive multidirectionnelle (p1) contemporaine de l'ouverture et du remplissage du bassin post-nappes de tizi-ouzou (depuis le burdigalien superieur jusqu'au serravallien). Les autres periodes tectoniques correspondent a un episode de compression (p2) oriente nw-se, contemporain de la phase principale de deformation deja connue dans la region et cartographiee (plis post-serravaliens asymetriques, deverses et chevauchants affectant a la fois le socle kabyle, les nappes et les formations post-nappes); une distension (p3) antepliocene, caracterisee par une extension nw-se, et deux periodes compressives successives, l'une d'axe de contrainte nne-ssw (p4) et l'autre nw-se a wnw-ese (p5). Ces dernieres correspondent a une epoque essentiellement compressive allant de miocene superieur au quaternaire. Les paleocontraintes determinees sont comparees a la trajectoire de la plaque afrique par rapport a la plaque europe definie par dewey et al. (1989)
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Books on the topic "Kabylia (Algeria)"

1

Scheele, Judith. Village matters: Knowledge, politics & community in Kabylia, Algeria. Woodbridge, Suffolk: James Currey, 2009.

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Village matters: Knowledge, politics & community in Kabylia, Algeria. Woodbridge, Suffolk: James Currey, 2009.

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Lacoste-Dujardin, Camille. La vaillance des femmes: Relations entre femmes et hommes berbères de kabylie. Alger: Barzakh, 2010.

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La vaillance des femmes: Relations entre femmes et hommes berbères de kabylie. Paris: Découverte, 2008.

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Mémoires d'un enfant de la guerre: Kabylie, Algérie, 1956-1962. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2011.

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Djenadi, Hadjila. Assewi: L'art de la cuisine kabyle. Alger: Inas éditions, 2005.

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editor, Arab Hamid, ed. Ma guerre d'Algérie: Au cœur des maquis de Kabylie, 1954-1962. Paris: Riveneuve éditions, 2012.

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S, Blair Dorothy, ed. My life story: The autobiography of a Berber woman. London: Women's Press, 1988.

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Amrouche, Fadhma A. M. Mektoub, "Der Wille Allahs geschehe". München: W. Heyne, 1994.

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S, Blair Dorothy, ed. My life story: The autobiography of a Berber woman. New Brunswick, N.J: Rutgers University Press, 1989.

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Book chapters on the topic "Kabylia (Algeria)"

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Said, Nadia Sidi, Azzeddine Benhamouche, Sahra Aourari, Djamel Machane, and Sid Ali Kechid. "Paleoseismological Indices Recognized in the Great Kabylia Rregion (Algeria)." In Paleobiodiversity and Tectono-Sedimentary Records in the Mediterranean Tethys and Related Eastern Areas, 251–54. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01452-0_60.

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Hammoum, Hocine, Karima Bouzelha, Mohammed Djemai, Malik Bouzelha, Lila Ben Si Said, and Mouloud Touat. "Development of Frequency Specific Flow Maps on the Sebaou Watershed in Great Kabylia in Algeria." In Advances in Sustainable and Environmental Hydrology, Hydrogeology, Hydrochemistry and Water Resources, 45–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01572-5_11.

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Bouzekria, Nacer-eddine. "Late Hercynian and Alpine Deformation in Sidi Abdelaziz Area Small Kabylie—Algeria." In The Structural Geology Contribution to the Africa-Eurasia Geology: Basement and Reservoir Structure, Ore Mineralisation and Tectonic Modelling, 213–16. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01455-1_45.

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Schmidt, Elmar. "Camus im kolonialen Algerien der 30er Jahre: Misère de la Kabylie." In Albert Camus oder der glückliche Sisyphos - Albert Camus ou Sisyphe heureux, 141–56. Göttingen: V&R Unipress, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737001465.141.

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Lacroix, Thomas. "Selecting Groups: Moroccan Chleuhs, Algerian Kabyles and Indian Sikhs in Europe." In Hometown Transnationalism, 17–44. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-56721-5_2.

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Rasmussen, Susan. "The Cultural Negotiations of Gender through Religion among Kabyle Algerian Immigrants in France." In Women and Inequality in the 21st Century, 137–53. 1 Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019. | Series: New critical viewpoints on society series: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315294971-12.

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Belkacem, Taieb. "Kabyle Community Participatory Action Research (CPAR) in Algeria: Reflections on Research, Amazigh Identity, and Schooling." In Education, Participatory Action Research, and Social Change, 195–207. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230100640_14.

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"XXV. INTO KABYLIA." In Winters in Algeria, 162–71. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463212735-025.

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Asseraf, Arthur. "Arab Telephone." In Electric News in Colonial Algeria, 65–99. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198844044.003.0002.

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The telegraph was introduced to connect Algeria to France. Yet the effects of the telegraph cables were double: they brought European Algerians closer to France at the same time as they brought Algerian Muslims closer to other Muslims around the world. Through the example of an incident in the town of Rébeval in Kabylia during the Greek–Ottoman War in 1897, we see how telegraphic news inserted itself into existing networks and allowed people in Algeria to connect their local problems with the rest of the Muslim world. As colonized Algerians were increasingly defined by French law as ‘Muslims’, they used this category to situate themselves within global events, leading to a ‘pan-Islamism’ from below. While French authorities remained convinced that this pan-Islamism was coming from outside, intermediaries employed by the French state were at the centre of this shift in the meaning of ‘Muslim’.
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"Regional Attractions: World And Village In Kabylia (Algeria)." In Translocality, 159–78. BRILL, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004181168.i-452.44.

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Conference papers on the topic "Kabylia (Algeria)"

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Hamani, Imene Hamani. "The Shadow of the Past: The Social and Political Struggle Experienced by the Algerian Kabyles’ Diaspora of the United Kingdom." In International Conference on Modern Approach in Humanities and Social Sciences. Acavent, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.33422/icmhs.2019.03.152.

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Noever, David, Josh Kalin, Matthew Ciolino, Dom Hambrick, and Gerry Dozier. "Local Translation Services for Neglected Languages." In 8th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Applications (AIAP 2021). AIRCC Publishing Corporation, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5121/csit.2021.110110.

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Taking advantage of computationally lightweight, but high-quality translators prompt consideration of new applications that address neglected languages. For projects with protected or personal data, translators for less popular or low-resource languages require specific compliance checks before posting to a public translation API. In these cases, locally run translators can render reasonable, cost-effective solutions if done with an army of offline, smallscale pair translators. Like handling a specialist’s dialect, this research illustrates translating two historically interesting, but obfuscated languages: 1) hacker-speak (“l33t”) and 2) reverse (or “mirror”) writing as practiced by Leonardo da Vinci. The work generalizes a deep learning architecture to translatable variants of hacker-speak with lite, medium, and hard vocabularies. The original contribution highlights a fluent translator of hacker-speak in under 50 megabytes and demonstrates a companion text generator for augmenting future datasets with greater than a million bilingual sentence pairs. A primary motivation stems from the need to understand and archive the evolution of the international computer community, one that continuously enhances their talent for speaking openly but in hidden contexts. This training of bilingual sentences supports deep learning models using a long short-term memory, recurrent neural network (LSTM-RNN). It extends previous work demonstrating an English-to-foreign translation service built from as little as 10,000 bilingual sentence pairs. This work further solves the equivalent translation problem in twenty-six additional (non-obfuscated) languages and rank orders those models and their proficiency quantitatively with Italian as the most successful and Mandarin Chinese as the most challenging. For neglected languages, the method prototypes novel services for smaller niche translations such as Kabyle (Algerian dialect) which covers between 5-7 million speakers but one which for most enterprise translators, has not yet reached development. One anticipates the extension of this approach to other important dialects, such as translating technical (medical or legal) jargon and processing health records or handling many of the dialects collected from specialized domains (mixed languages like “Spanglish”, acronym-laden Twitter feeds, or urban slang).
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