Contents
Academic literature on the topic 'Pikine (Sénégal)'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Pikine (Sénégal).'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Pikine (Sénégal)"
Pinard, Émilie. "Les femmes propriétaires à Pikine, au Sénégal : entre nouvelles responsabilités familiales et désir d’autonomie." Articles 29, no. 2 (January 16, 2017): 43–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1038720ar.
Full textFassin, Didier, Emile Jeannée, Gérard Salem, and Marc Réveillon. "Les enjeux sociaux de la participation communautaire : les comités de santé à Pikine (Sénégal)." Sciences sociales et santé 4, no. 3 (1986): 205–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/sosan.1986.1046.
Full textSalem, Gérard, and Thierry Lang. "Transition épidémiologique et changement social dans les villes africaines : approche anthropologique de l'hypertension artérielle à Pikine (Sénégal)." Sciences sociales et santé 11, no. 2 (1993): 27–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/sosan.1993.1263.
Full textPaquet, S., A. Tal Dia, M. Niang, and J. Y. Le Hesran. "Séroprévalence de l’infection par le virus A/H1N1pdm09 et facteurs de risque d’infection à Pikine, région de Dakar, Sénégal." Revue d'Épidémiologie et de Santé Publique 64 (September 2016): S186—S187. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.respe.2016.06.042.
Full textKomlavi Hahonou, Eric, and Caroline Schaer. "Coproduire les services publics." Emulations - Revue de sciences sociales, no. 20 (June 12, 2017): 35–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.14428/emulations.020.003.
Full textFall, Maouly, Aicha Awbeck Fall, Abdoulaye Léye, Moustapha Ndiaye, and Thérèse Moreira Diop. "La myasthénie auto-immune de l’adulte lors d’une consultation décentralisée de neurologie au centre hospitalier national de Pikine dans la banlieue de Dakar-Sénégal." Revue Neurologique 171 (April 2015): A153. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neurol.2015.01.337.
Full textMichel, R., M. N. Ndiaye, F. D. Sarr, D. Goudiaby, M. L. Senghor, and O. M. Diop. "Un an de surveillance de la grippe parmi les syndromes respiratoires aigus à l’institut de pédiatrie sociale de Pikine, banlieue de Dakar, Sénégal 2009." Revue d'Épidémiologie et de Santé Publique 58 (September 2010): S88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.respe.2010.06.131.
Full textNdiaye, O., A. Diallo, F. Matty, A. Thiaw, RD Fall, and A. Guisse. "Caractérisation des sols de la zone des Niayes de Pikine et de Saint Louis (Sénégal)." International Journal of Biological and Chemical Sciences 6, no. 1 (August 29, 2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ijbcs.v6i1.46.
Full textProthmann, Sebastian. "Identités urbaines et appartenance : les discours des jeunes hommes de Pikine (Sénégal) à propos de leur ville." Revue internationale de politique de développement, no. 10 (October 1, 2018). http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/poldev.3282.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Pikine (Sénégal)"
Navarro, Roger. "Genaw-Rails, quartier irrégulier de Pikine : les structures de l'irrégularité urbaine dans le Cap-Vert, Sénégal : réflexions sur les fondements de l'anthropologie urbaine." Aix-Marseille 3, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987AIX32053.
Full textMichel, Elisabeth. "Hypertension artérielle au Sénégal : étude épidémiologique à Pikine." Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1989STR1M056.
Full textPinard, Émilie. "«Construire son futur» : production de l'habitation et transformation des rapports de genre à Pikine, Sénégal." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/25529.
Full textCette thèse porte sur la production de l’habitation des quartiers informels et sur sa participation dans le processus d’autonomisation des femmes sénégalaises. Elle documente les acteurs, normes et pratiques impliqués dans la construction résidentielle, par l’étude des cas de dix-sept femmes propriétaires et de leur maison dans quatre quartiers de Pikine, en périphérie de Dakar. Supportée par un cadre théorique qui permet de concevoir l’habitation comme un processus dynamique et multidimensionnel, cette étude met en lumière les rapports sociaux développés autour de la mobilisation des ressources pour construire et de la transformation de la forme bâtie. L’approche méthodologique combine des entretiens narratifs avec les propriétaires sur des séquences de vie et l’histoire de leur maison, des relevés architecturaux, des entretiens avec des intervenants locaux et une enquête sur la population et les habitations des quartiers étudiés. Une attention particulière est portée aux moyens individuels et collectifs déployés par les femmes pour la production de leur habitation, afin d’en éclairer les possibilités et contraintes pour la transformation des rapports de genre et l’autonomisation. La thèse montre que les femmes doivent s’appuyer sur divers réseaux pour mobiliser les ressources pour construire, tout en s’assurant de sécuriser celles-ci pour protéger, à long terme, les possibilités qu’elles ont créées pour elle-même et leur famille et, par le fait même, négocier ou transformer les normes sociales qui les désavantagent. Dans ce processus, l’espace résidentiel devient pour les propriétaires un médium des rapports aux autres et peut contribuer au maintien ou à la perte de cet équilibre entre l’accès à de nouvelles ressources et la sécurisation des acquis. Cette étude remet ainsi en question les interprétations, à la base de nombreux écrits et politiques de logement, sur la nature spontanée des quartiers informels et sur les principaux objectifs associés à la construction dans ce contexte. Pour les femmes propriétaires, le processus de production en lui-même représente une voie vers de nouvelles possibilités sociales et économiques porteuses d’une plus grande sécurité et d’une autonomie; pour « construire son futur », transformer activement sa maison est donc souvent plus important que l’obtention d’un bâtiment fini.
This thesis examines informal housing production and its contribution to the empowerment of Senegalese women. It documents the everyday practices, norms and social relationships involved in the construction of houses “from below”, through a detailed analysis of women owners and their houses in four unplanned neighbourhoods of Pikine, in the periphery of Dakar. Considering housing as a dynamic and multidimensional process, this study sheds light on people’s interactions over resource transactions and space, while paying attention to negotiations and inequalities associated with these processes and their consequences for daily life in the city. It describes the strategies through which women owners produce their house and secure a place for themselves and their family in the urban agglomeration, and the spatial and social consequences of these processes. In-depth interviews and life stories with women owners and their families were conducted in combination with architectural surveys of their houses, interviews with key actors involved in land subdivision and housing production, and surveys on land transaction and housing conditions. The thesis shows that women need to draw on a wide range of networks to access resources and at the same time continually negotiate and protect the space of opportunity they have created for themselves; in doing so, they resist and transform social and spatial norms. These results question the usual interpretation according to which obtaining a finished house is the main objective of house construction: for women, the production process itself represents a path towards greater security, but also towards an array of new social and economic possibilities, that are often more significant than the (sometimes never reached) final result.
Fassin, Didier. "Thérapeutes et malades dans la ville africaine : rapports sociaux, urbanisation et santé à Pikine, banlieue de Dakar." Paris, EHESS, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988EHES0015.
Full textThe means that society implements to interpret, combat and prevent disease involve social representations and practises beyond biologic disorders of the body. For this reason, the study of the social relationships structuring the therapeutic relation and of the social actors involved, in the suburbs of dakar, enables to more generally understand the urban phenomenon in africa. From a sociological analysis (on a theme and field usually studied by medical anthropologists and urban anthropologists), the purpose is to shift the objects of the research from disease to health and from city to urbanization, i. E. , on the one hand, to look for the social and political stakes in the different fields where health is concerned and, on the other hand, to change the urban problematic form a spatial frame - the city - to a social context - the social relations which make urbanization. In order to demonstrate the complexity and hete- rogeneity of the urban society, the methodological approach has been varied, combining quantitative and qualitative studies, dealing with urban quarters and social networks, going back to the village, ending to an intentionnally fragmented description of the city. At the conclusion of this work, a new phenome- non appears through which african social realities are better understood : health appears as a market (in the weberian meaning), i. E. A socialized space where goods and services are exchanged between agents who belong to different fields (political, religious and of course medical) with distinct logics (which explains the constant readjustments which has health as a stake). This health market characterized by struggles for power and unequalities in front of disease has been studied in order to better analyze this process of social change which we called urbanization and in which the city is only the dominant focus
Bob, Ibrahima. "Les stratégies participatives des femmes urbaines dans les associations de développement au Sénégal : le cas de l'Association pour le développement des femmes avicultrices de Pikine (ADEFAP)." Amiens, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009AMIE0016.
Full textMbanza, Edgar Charles. "Vie sociale des objets communicationnels dans les marges : une ethnographie de l'ordinaire des technologies de communication dans les bidonvilles de Kibera (Nairobi) et Pikine (Dakar)." Paris, EHESS, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016EHES0022.
Full textWhat we call daily media (mobile phone, television and internet in this case) in African urban ghettos is a wonderful research subject for those who are interested in mutations of media communication. It also allows us to explain in new ways the dialectic imbrication of technology and society. Using an approach based on ethnographie immersion in the life of people, and comparing two sites located in the slums of Kibera (Nairobi) and Pikine (Dakar), our research generally focuses on the integration of those marginalized actors into the technological modernity. More than half of urban Africa nowadays lives in slums; and if it is often argued that the urban poor are those who are the most affected by the "digital divide", or conversely, that they are some inventive"bricoleurs"(digital do-it-yourselfers), there are few empirical works that explore the "arts of doing" and the modes of presence of those technologies in the environments of live. How technocommunicationals objects, whose properties and circulation patterns significantly have changed over the last years, do fit in the "moral economy" of survival context? Is there or not an emergence of a "milieu (médiatique) associé" presented as a space of participation and sharing, unlike previous generations of technologies? This work recalls the urgent need to relocate the marginalized players in the center of the analysis of contemporary culture. It also invites us to overcome the "Great Divide" in our ways of thinking about the relation between local and global, production and reception, individual and collective, private and public, etc
Dieng, Moussa. "La demande de soins et les dépenses de santé en milieu péri-urbain dans un contexte de subvention à Pikine, Sénégal." Thesis, Clermont-Ferrand 1, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015CLF10468.
Full textImproving population’s access to health care services stands among the utmost priorities in the’agenda of alleviating poverty in Africa. Recently, many policymakers in sub Saharan African countries have tried to remove users fees at the point of service This policy aims at easing the financial burden of out of pocket paiements in an episode of illness,which can be catastrophic,hence boosting the demand for healthcare services. Delivering adequate healthcare services in urban suburbs has become increasingly difficult with the massive urbanization trend, particularlyin Sub Saharan Africa. In addition, difficulties in improving health conditions are intensified by the rise in the morbidity, due to chronic and communicable diseases. Combined together, these phenomenons have brought to the forefront the relevance of the issues relative to healthcare delivery, access and financing in urban areas.Building upon survey data, this thesis focuses on individual’s demand of healthcare services and their corresponding health expenditure in urban suburbs of Senegal. Chapter I lays the theoretical foundations of healthcare services demand and its specific features; and presents the Senegalese context. The methodology relative to data collection and data analysis, including the identified diseases, their course of treatment and the associated health expenditures are detailed in Chapter II. Using a multinomial probit model, Chapter III analyzes the demand of healthcare services resulting from individual’s statement of acute symptoms. Finally, Chapter IV assesses the determinants of health expenditure, using the Heckman model
Ndiaye, Tidiane. "La gestion foncière pour la réduction des risques de désastre naturel : le cas des inondations de la ville de Pikine, Sénégal." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/25673.
Full textThe recurrence and Scale of natural disasters have currently significant societal challenges, especially when looked at from the angle of territorial planning and land management for the reduction of the risk inherent to human settlement in vulnerable areas. As a matter of fact, the region of Dakar, Senegal, has been facing recurring seasonal floodings for decades, causing significant damage. Pikine, a town in the suburbs, is the most affected. Between 2005 and 2009 it is estimated that 360,000 people have been directly affected by floodings in that suburban area of Dakar (IAGU, 2009). These seasonal events continue to increase the vulnerability of the population who is often poor and has no option but to live in those areas at risk. This case study will address the following question: What are the factors associated with the settlements in those areas at risk? What are the interrelationships between land management and vulnerability to natural disasters? What land-management-related interventions have been implemented to mitigate the risk of flooding? The answers to these questions will enable us to better understand the land-management-related characteristics of vulnerability.
Diagne, Yacine. "Sociologie politique d'une expérience de démocratie participative. Le cas d'une radio communautaire au Sénégal." Thesis, Paris 9, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA090018/document.
Full textAspiring to “give a voice” to the poor people of Pikine, a suburb of the Senegalese capital, “Local Debate” is an interactive political programme of the community radio Air’Jeunes, created in the late nineties at the initiative of youth associations in the Dakar region with support from a major Canadian NGO. This thesis explores the use of this programme by local citizens in three main areas where activists and proponents of participatory democracy are committed to developing citizen action mechanisms, aiming to correct the defects and shortcomings under the democratic ideal of representative government: the role of citizens in the production system of local public goods, symbolic relationships between elected leaders and electors, and the public space for debate on public policies and the actions of representatives. Based on an ethnographic field study conducted in three phases between 2006 and 2011 in the radio production studio and the show’s listening sites, it appears that, even if the programme has enabled forms of contestation of local authority to be voiced publicly without mediation, the realisation of the original project faced an unfavourable local context marked by the lack of resources given to local officials to exercise their newly decentralised powers and a local political journalism polarised around two dominant forms, leaving little room for debate: the antagonistic journalism of big private groups and small informal press, and the legitimising journalism of the public service group. Despite their militant commitment to the project, radio staff and hosts whose social origins and educational backgrounds distance them from the forms of consumption of information goods and activities of Pikine’s inhabitants, as well as the dynamic activities of informal neighbourhood associations in the suburbs of Dakar, have gradually yielded to forces of attraction exercised by mainstream private radios, influencing their vision of their professional future and, in turn, their journalistic practice