Academic literature on the topic 'Katanga Province'

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Journal articles on the topic "Katanga Province"

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Mwembu, Donatien Dibwe dia. "La réharmonisation des rapports entre les Katangais et les Kasaïens dans la province du Katanga (1991-2005)." Anthropologie et Sociétés 30, no. 1 (October 24, 2006): 117–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/013831ar.

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Résumé La République démocratique du Congo a connu des conflits interethniques graves qui ont failli amener le pays à la balkanisation. « Père » de la nation zaïroise, le président Mobutu s’est vu traiter de metteur en scène parce que tout le monde savait pertinemment qu’il était l’instigateur des divisions internes entre différentes populations congolaises, en particulier du conflit qui créait pour la deuxième fois un fossé entre les originaires du Kasaï et ceux de la province du Katanga. Dans cette étude, nous tentons de passer en revue les différents mécanismes mis sur pied par les institutions publiques, par des organisations non gouvernementales et des associations socioculturelles pour amener les deux communautés antagonistes katangaise et kasaïenne à créer un espace de négociations et de médiations en vue relire ensemble leur passé commun, de reconnaître leurs fautes, de s’amender, de réharmoniser leurs rapports et de rétablir la paix dans la province du Katanga et en République démocratique du Congo.
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Yakovlev, Roman V. "New species of Acosma Yakovlev, 2011 (Lepidoptera, Cossidae, Zeuzerinae) from the Democratic Republic of Congo." Ecologica Montenegrina 35 (October 8, 2020): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.37828/em.2020.35.1.

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Cornips, Leonie, and Vincent de Rooij. "Katanga Swahili and Heerlen Dutch: A sociohistorical and linguistic comparison of contact varieties in mining regions." International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2019, no. 258 (August 27, 2019): 35–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijsl-2019-2028.

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Abstract This article compares sociolinguistic and structural outcomes of language contact processes in two mining areas on two different continents, namely the Katanga region in the southeast of what is now the DR Congo, Africa and Heerlen as centre of the former Eastern Mine District in the southeastern province of Limburg in the Netherlands, Europe. Several similarities between these two regions make this comparison interesting. Both in Katanga and Heerlen, the natural copper and coal resources were located in border regions that were peripheral to central seats of government. In both regions, the exploitation of these resources, the growth of mining industries and rapid urbanization, began in the same period, the late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries. Despite being located on different continents – Africa and Europe – similar social conditions of language contact were responsible for the genesis of the language varieties underground and above ground. The language contact situations in Limburg and Katanga both resulted in structural innovation of Dutch and Swahili respectively. The most interesting innovation we identify in both cases can be characterized as the regularization of grammatical properties, and the expansion of aspect marking.
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Aitzetmüller, Kurt, Edouard Ngoy-Kihuya, and Irène Kitwa-Kabila. "Sumbi oil from Katanga and South Kivu Province, Democratic Republic of Congo." Lipid - Fett 100, no. 7 (July 1998): 308–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1521-4133(199807)100:7<308::aid-lipi308>3.0.co;2-#.

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HÄCKEL, MARTIN. "A contribution to the knowledge of the subfamily Panagaeinae Hope, 1838 from Africa. Part 2. Revision of the Craspedophorus leprieuri and C. regalis groups (Coleoptera: Carabidae)." Zootaxa 4236, no. 2 (February 22, 2017): 201. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4236.2.1.

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Afrotropical species of the Craspedophorus leprieuri and Craspedophorus regalis groups are revised. C. clasispilus (Alluaud, 1915) and C. guineensis Basilewsky, 1987 are considered as subspecies of C. leprieuri (Laporte de Castelnau, 1835); the synonymized C. peringueyi Csiki, 1929 (=laticollis Péringuey, 1904) is restated as subspecies of C. leprieuri, and it is described C. leprieuri zambianus (DR Congo: Katanga Province; Zambia); C. pseudofestivus Burgeon, 1930 is considered subspecies of C. merus Péringuey, 1904, and it is described C. merus lundanus (Angola, DR Congo: Kasai-Oriental and Katanga Provinces); C. bouvieri imperialis Burgeon, 1930 is considered to be a separate species of C. bouvieri (Rousseau, 1905), and C. bouvieri dux Basilewsky, 1951 is transferred to C. imperialis. The synonymized C. sayersii (Hope, 1842) is considered to be a good subspecies of C. regalis. C. bouvieri crampeli (Alluaud, 1915) is removed from C. bouvieri, and transferred to C. reflexus (Fabricius, 1781) in the C. reflexus species group (Häckel 2016). In this group C. uelensis Burgeon, 1930 is considered to be a subspecies of C. reflexus; and C. bozasi Alluaud, 1930 is synonymized with C. reflexus uelensis Burgeon, 1930. C. arnosti Häckel 2016 is synonymized with C. reflexus crampeli (Alluaud, 1915), C. ethmoides Alluaud, 1930 is synonymized with C. impictus (Boheman, 1848), and C. lebaudyi Alluaud, 1932 is synonymized with C. stanleyi Alluaud, 1930.
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Kabamba Ngombe, Léon, Roger Ngatu Nlandu, Dieudonné Kazadi Sha Ngombe, Benjamin Kabyla Ilunga, Stanislas Wembonyama Okitotsho, Jean-Baptiste Kakoma Sakatolo, Oscar Luboya Numbi, and Brigitta Danuser. "Respiratory health of dust-exposed cement carriers in Haut-Katanga province, D.R. Congo." Environnement Risques Santé 18, no. 6 (December 2019): 500–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.1684/ers.2019.1372.

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Kwete, Gabriel Kwete Woto, Ekra Yao, and Jacques Kyungu Wa Numbi. "Measles Outbreak Investigation in Pweto Health Zone—Haut-Katanga Province, DR of the Congo, 2018." OALib 07, no. 11 (2020): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/oalib.1106863.

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Burlet, C., Y. Vanbrabant, H. Goethals, T. Thys, and L. Dupin. "Raman spectroscopy as a tool to characterize heterogenite (CoO·OH) (Katanga Province, Democratic Republic of Congo)." Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy 80, no. 1 (October 2011): 138–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.saa.2011.03.007.

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Stephens, Jay, David Killick, Edwin Wilmsen, James Denbow, and Duncan Miller. "Lead isotopes link copper artefacts from northwestern Botswana to the Copperbelt of Katanga Province, Congo." Journal of Archaeological Science 117 (May 2020): 105124. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2020.105124.

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Martin, MWENZE MINZA, and KALAMA KASEBA Odon. "Le réchauffement climatique à l’ère de la covid-19 dans la Province du Haut-Katanga." KAS African Law Study Library - Librairie Africaine d’Etudes Juridiques 8, no. 2 (2021): 226–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/2363-6262-2021-2-226.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Katanga Province"

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Kyoni, Idriss. "Contribution à l'amélioration de la fiabilitédu réseau électrique de la province du Katanga/RD Congo." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/269651.

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RésuméLa République Démocratique du Congo est dotée d’un potentiel hydroélectrique estimé à 100.000MW répartis sur 217 sites, dont 2.6% du potentiel est exploité à ce jour. Malgré ce potentiel, malheureusement le taux d’accès de la population congolaise à l’électricité est de 9%, contre une moyenne africaine évaluée à 24.6%. La province du Katanga étant le poumon économique de la RDC est dotée de 24 sites pouvant produire une puissance exploitable de 1952MW, mais actuellement, seulement 4 sites sont en exploitation pour une puissance de 468MW.Suite à l’intensification d’activités industrielles dans la province du Katanga pour la production de matières premières (cuivre et cobalt essentiellement) ces dernières années et à l’accroissement de la population urbaine, la demande en énergie électrique ne fait qu’augmenter d’année en année. Le gestionnaire de réseau face à cette réalité, recourt en permanence à l’importation d’électricité depuis la Zambie pour satisfaire la clientèle. Mais malgré ce recours, la charge n’est pas totalement satisfaite, alors le gestionnaire est conduit à instaurer une politique de délestage tournant pour soulager son réseau électrique.Le but de notre thèse est l’amélioration de la fiabilité/sécurité d’approvisionnement du réseau katangais par des approches locales qui sont constituées de construction de nouvelles centrales électriques et de voir dans quelle mesure le recours au stockage peut contribuer à cette amélioration. La fiabilité du système électrique sera caractérisée par les indicateurs de fiabilité de niveaux hiérarchiques I et II. Pour atteindre notre objectif, une modélisation simplifiée, mais suffisamment détaillée, du réseau électrique sud/SNEL (Société Nationale d’Electricité) s’est avérée nécessaire, et l’application des outils de résolution des OPF (Optimal Power Flow) à ce réseau nous a permis d’estimer les indicateurs de fiabilité et de faire également l’analyse de sécurité du système. Cette analyse a servi à identifier les lignes et transformateurs candidats au renforcement du réseau.Les résultats obtenus ont montré une faible influence de l’utilisation des unités de stockage sur les indicateurs de fiabilité au niveau de la haute tension. Néanmoins des bons résultats ont été obtenus lors de l’utilisation du stockage au niveau de la distribution. Pour améliorer davantage les indicateurs de fiabilité, nos recherches présentent les perspectives sur les modèles de charge, la prise en compte d’un modèle de réseau étalé jusqu’à la moyenne tension ainsi d’une étude dynamique. SummaryThe Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is endowed with a hydroelectric potential estimated at 100.000MW. This potential is distributed on 217 sites, among which only 2.6% is exploited to this day. But unfortunately, in spite of this potential, only 9% of the Congolese population have access to electricity, while the African average is estimated at 24.6%. The province of Katanga, considered as the economic lung of the DRC, is endowed with 24 sites, which can produce an exploitable power of 1952MW. At present, only 4 out of the 24 sites are in exploitation, for an installed power of 468MW.These last years, the province of Katanga has encountered an intensification of industrial activities for the production of raw materials such as copper and cobalt. Furthermore, the urban population is rapidly expanding. These two factors are causes of a constant increase of the demand in electrical energy. To deal with this requirement, the electrical system operator is forced to import a part of the supply from Zambia in order to satisfy the customers. However, despite this importation, the load is not fully satisfied. The system operator must then establish a policy of rotating load shedding to relieve the network.The purpose of our thesis is the improvement of the supply reliability/safety of the Katanga network, by local approaches which are constituted of the construction of new power plants, and to see to which extent storage can contribute to this improvement. The reliability of the electrical system will be characterized by reliability indicators at hierarchical levels I and II. To reach this goal, a simplified, yet sufficiently detailed modeling of the south network/SNEL (National Company of Electricity) was necessary, and the application of OPF (Optimal Power Flow) tools to this network model allowed us estimating the reliability indicators and making the safety analysis of the system. This analysis helped identify lines and transformers that are candidates to the reinforcement of the network.The obtained results showed a weak influence of the use of the storage units on the reliability indicators at the high voltage level. Nevertheless, good results have been obtained when using storage at the distribution level. For a better improvement of the reliability indicators of the Katanga network, our research works present perspectives on the models of load, taking into account an extended network model up to the medium voltage and a dynamic study.
Doctorat en Sciences de l'ingénieur et technologie
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Jesse, Fungwa Kipimo. "Studying pentecostalism missiologically: The Congo Evangelistic Mission in Katanga Province, Democratic Republic of Congo." Thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18320.

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This thesis is a critical missiological analysis of Pentecostal mission, specifically of the Congo Evangelistic Mission (CEM) in the Katanga Province of the Democratic Republic of Congo. It investigates how CEM members have been interpreting and expressing the Christian message in and for the context of Katanga Province through their communal life, worship and mission since its inception in 1914. It also asks the methodological question of how such a Pentecostal mission could best be studied and evaluated missiologically. To carry out this investigation the researcher developed a “Pentecostal Praxis Missiological Approach” which he used extensively throughout his study. Chapter two demonstrates that, while British missionaries brought the CEM to Katanga province, it was the early Congolese pioneers who actually spread the movement to different parts of Katanga and beyond its borders. Chapter three shows how CEM members have analysed the Congolese context, identifying it as a lost, unholy and socially broken society with high levels of poverty, unemployment and poor access to basic needs; it is also beset with problems of war and conflict, corruption and injustices as well as abuse of women. Chapter four focuses on the spirituality of power that inspires and motivates the CEM in the various dimensions of its mission. Chapter five uses mainly liturgical sources like prayers, songs and sermons to construct the Pentecostal theology of mission that guides and directs the CEM in its mission. Chapter six explores the agents and strategies of mission that the CEM uses to address the missional challenges they identify in their context. The final chapter raises six key missiological issues that emerged from the study and that require the attention of missiological scholars in order to foster the future of Pentecostal mission in Congo and the Southern African region as a whole. These issues are: preventing ongoing schisms, evangelising members of other religious traditions, the scope of healing, the impact of rapture theology, the place of women in ordained Pentecostal ministry, and the extent of contextualisation in the CEM. Keys terms Katanga Province,
Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology
D.Th. (Missiology)
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Jesse, Fungwa Kipimo. "A missiological study of the Kimbanguist Church in Katanga Province, Democratic Republic of Congo." Diss., 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2670.

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This is a systematic and critical study of the mission of the Kimbanguist Church in the city of Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The research question was: “How do the Kimbanguist members interpret and express the Christian message in and for the context of Katanga province through their communal life, worship and mission?” A historical chapter traces the origins and growth of the church, followed by four chapters that analyze the mission of the church by means of a ‘praxis cycle.’ The chapters look at mission strategies (leadership, church departments, mission methods), followed by mission agents (spiritual head, clergy, chaplains, women, youth), the theological sources of mission (the Bible, the life of Simon Kimbangu, and a code of conduct) and spirituality (liturgy, sacraments, pilgrimages and festivals). In a concluding chapter several critical issues were identified for critical dialogue between the Kimbanguist church and other African churches.
Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology
M. Th. (Missiology)
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Book chapters on the topic "Katanga Province"

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Dibwe dia Mwembu, Donatien. "La formation des élites coloniales. Le cas de la province du Katanga." In Le manifeste Conscience africaine (1956), 117–39. Presses de l'Université Saint-Louis, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pusl.10400.

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"5. La problématique de l’habitat dans la ville de Lubumbashi (Elisabethville), province du Katanga, 1910–1960." In The Politics of Housing in (Post-)Colonial Africa, 121–40. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110601183-005.

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M. Tshibangu, Innocent. "Goat Breeding in the Katanga Copper Belt (KCB): Constraints, Opportunities and Prospects." In Goat Science - Environment, Health and Economy [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.98941.

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DR Congo’s copper belt is south of the dismembered former province of Katanga. The population has grown over the past twenty years due to the resumption of industrial and artisanal mining. This situation has led to an increase in demand for agricultural products including meat. The majority of these products are imported due to insufficient local production. Goat meat is the most consumed of the ruminants and most of these animals are imported from Zambia. Thousands of the goats are slaughtered daily and its meat sold in all markets and especially next to thousands of drinking establishments as appetizers. Unfortunately, this opportunity does not benefit local breeders because of several factors including the low productivity of the local goat, a stray breeding system, insufficiency and lack of space for breeding, contamination of pastures by heavy metals, insecurity, supremacy of the mining code over agricultural law, the dispossession of agricultural land belonging to peasants for the benefit of private farmers … In perspective, the establishment of a collaborative structure between breeders, development agents and technicians, researchers and policy makers in sectors related to goat farming and its environment will provide access to information and improve goat production.
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Ngoy-Fiama, Balthazar Bitambile, and Irèn Ngoy-Fiama. "Chapitre 24. Projet d’éducation au développement durable dans les écoles, instituts et universités de la Province du Katanga en République démocratique du Congo." In Education au développement durable, 469. De Boeck Supérieur, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/dbu.diemer.2014.01.0469.

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"Children’s rights in the Democratic Republic of Congo and neoliberal reforms: the case of mines in the province of Katanga G É RALDI N E AN DRÉ AN D MARI E GODI N." In Children's Lives in an Era of Children's Rights, 90–109. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203594926-11.

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"Rentier Politics and Low Intensity Conflicts in the DRC: The Case of Kasai and Katanga Provinces." In Extractive Economies and Conflicts in the Global South, 153–66. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351158404-17.

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Seroussi, Julien. "Expertise in the Bench? The Dis-embeddedness of International Criminal Justice." In The President on Trial, 241–50. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198858621.003.0031.

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This chapter discusses how contextualizing facts can alter judicial outcomes, arguing for the necessity of developing a sociological theory about the facts of a case in order to ascribe responsibility in a court. Judges in international courts have very sparse access to information when they have to judge foreign situations from abroad. Thus, judges elaborate what can be called ‘folk sociological theories’ (FST), which are sociological narratives that can provide them with a grasp of the situation and a guide for the selection of facts that can demonstrate responsibility or guilt in the accomplishment of crimes. The chapter applies FSTs to the Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo cases, suggesting that they raise important conceptual implications for understanding the epistemological limitations of international criminal proceedings. It also considers the production of FSTs through a pragmatic approach, showing when FSTs successfully produce the irrelevance of facts in fact-finding processes, and when they fail the reality tests of legal procedure.
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Conference papers on the topic "Katanga Province"

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Kyoni Nkulu, Idriss, Pierre-Etienne Labeau, and Richard Ngenda Banka. "Contribution à l'amélioration de la fiabilité du réseau électrique de la province du Katanga (RDC)." In Congrès Lambda Mu 20 de Maîtrise des Risques et de Sûreté de Fonctionnement, 11-13 Octobre 2016, Saint Malo, France. IMdR, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4267/2042/61798.

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Arno, Matthew G., Janine Katanic Arno, Donald A. Halter, Robert O. Berry, and Ian S. Hamilton. "Radiological Characterization of a Copper/Cobalt Mining and Milling Site." In ASME 2009 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2009-16322.

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Extensive copper and cobalt ore deposits can be found in the Katanga Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo near the city of Kolwezi. These deposits have been mined via open pit and underground mines since the 19th century with many changes in control of the mines including colonial industrial control and Congolese government control. With the recent re-establishment of a relatively stable democratic government in the DRC, foreign investors returned to the area to restart mining activities that were abruptly terminated in the 1990’s due to political turmoil. Some of these new projects are being performed in accordance with World Bank and International Finance Corporation Social & Environmental Sustainability standards. As part of these standards, radiological characterization of the mines, processing facilities, and surrounding environment was conducted to establish current conditions, evaluate human health and ecological risks, and provide a basis for establishment of radiation safety and environmental remediation programs. In addition to naturally occurring radioactive materials associated with the copper/cobalt ore, the site was reputedly historically used to store ore from the Shinkolobwe uranium mine, the source of the uranium ore for the World War II Manhattan project. The radiological characterization was conducted via extensive gamma radiation surveys using vehicle-mounted sodium-iodide detectors, random grid composite soil sampling, biased soil sampling of areas with elevated gamma radiation levels, and sampling of surface water features. The characterization revealed broad areas of elevated gamma radiation levels of up to 160 μGy/hr in two distinct areas believed to be the Shinkolobwe uranium mine ore storage locations. Other areas, with gamma radiation levels of up to 80 μGy/hr, were detected associated with copper/cobalt ore refinery tailings and waste rock (overburden) sediments. The gamma radiation surveys revealed that elevated radiation levels were largely confined to areas previously disturbed by mechanized mining activities. Radiological contaminants in local surface water sources were within drinking water standards with the exception of one river heavily polluted with both uranium and other metals by waste streams from an ore processing and refining facility. Surrounding areas that appeared to be undisturbed by mining, including agricultural areas, native villages, and urban colonial-architecture cities, exhibited soil concentration and gamma radiation levels consistent with expected background levels.
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