Academic literature on the topic 'Urbanisation – Mali – Bamako (Mali)'
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Journal articles on the topic "Urbanisation – Mali – Bamako (Mali)"
van de Walle, Francine, and Mariam Maiga. "Family Planning in Bamako, Mali." International Family Planning Perspectives 17, no. 3 (September 1991): 84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2133289.
Full textDiarra, Bassirou, Sophia Siddiqui, Dramane Sogoba, Brehima Traore, Mamoudou Maiga, Janice Washington, Anatole Tounkara, and Michael A. Polis. "Mycobacterium tuberculosisBeijing Strain, Bamako, Mali." Emerging Infectious Diseases 16, no. 2 (February 2010): 361–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1602.090501.
Full textKonare, Alpha Oumar. "Bamako, Mali,: Naissance d'un musée." Museum International (Edition Francaise) 33, no. 1 (April 24, 2009): 4–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1755-5825.1981.tb01885.x.
Full textMahé, Antoine, Idrissa Ah Cissé, Ousmane Faye, Hawa Thiam N′Diaye, and Pascal Niamba. "Skin diseases in Bamako (Mali)." International Journal of Dermatology 37, no. 9 (September 1998): 673–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-4362.1998.00454.x.
Full textTapia, Milagritos D., Samba O. Sow, Boubou Tamboura, Mahamadou M. Keita, Abdoulaye Berthe, Mariam Samake, James P. Nataro, et al. "Streptococcal Pharyngitis in Schoolchildren in Bamako, Mali." Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal 34, no. 5 (May 2015): 463–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/inf.0000000000000608.
Full textFaye, Ousmane, Lamissa Cisse, Siritio Berthe, Adama Dicko, Hawa Thiam Ndiaye, Pierre Traore, Karim Coulibaly, and Somita Keita. "Pruritus in dermatological hospital in Bamako, Mali." International Journal of Dermatology 51 (November 2012): 44–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-4632.2012.05565.x.
Full textFaye, Ousmane, Lamissa Cisse, Siritio Berthe, Adama Dicko, Hawa Thiam Ndiaye, Pierre Traore, Karim Coulibaly, and Somita Keita. "Prurit en consultation hospitalière à Bamako, Mali." International Journal of Dermatology 51 (November 2012): 49–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-4632.2012.05565_suppl.x.
Full textMaiga, Y., Y. Toloba, P. M’belesso, R. Danièle, Y. Cissoko, S. Illiassou, M. Y. Maiga, and H. A. Traoré. "Neuropathic pain during tuberculosis treatment in Bamako (Mali)." Médecine et Santé Tropicales 22, no. 3 (July 2012): 312–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1684/mst.2012.0090.
Full textFaye, Ousmane, Somita Keita, F. S. Diakite, H. D. Konare, and Hawa Thiam Ndiaye. "Side effects of depigmenting products in Bamako, Mali." International Journal of Dermatology 44, s1 (October 2005): 35–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-4632.2005.02809.x.
Full textBertrand, Monique. "Bamako (Mali) : habitat de cour et mobilités résidentielles." Espace, populations, sociétés 17, no. 1 (1999): 119–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/espos.1999.1874.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Urbanisation – Mali – Bamako (Mali)"
Mainbourg, Evelyne. "Manger et boire à Bamako (Mali) : étude d'anthropologie sociologique." Tours, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986TOUR2007.
Full textSeveral socio-cultural dynamics prevail in bamako, capital town of mali : town-planning, migration, concentration of exchanges. . . That town of nearly 700 000 inhabitants is the melting pot of new forms of sociality among which the phenomenon of food is worth being studied. In this context of multiplicity which is the characteristic of a large town, we have asked ourself about food identity of the malian population of bamako. Who eats what? and how do they eat? what are the determinant factors of the food pattern? food is a social and cultural fact through which are expressed the assimilation and distinction which specify the belonging to a group. That is why, to the knowledge of food consumptions must be associated an approach of the private and the daily which ritualise the food. Therefore, it seemed suitable to associate both qualitative and quantitative methods in order to better describe food and better penetrate its social and cultural size
Fofana, Sory Ibrahima. "Enjeux des mutations et des recompositions du foncier autour de Bamako (Mali)." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017REN20016.
Full textIn an uncontrolled urbanization context, the study of issues, mutations and reconstructions of land around Bamako (Mali) shows major transformations of land and allows us to understand the inequalities of access and constraints that rural people face. The high demographic growth recorded in cities as well as in peripheral towns, is a source of deep land transfers and important issues. These areas affected by rapid and multiple transformations in the context of decentralization is favored by economic liberalism since the advent of democracy. The main objective of this research is to contribute to a better understanding of agricultural land changes and their role in the supply of the city of Bamako. Through investigations based on field observation, questionnaire survey and interviews, the thesis is thus to analyze land issues, the different participants in the land transfer process, the peri urban role in supplying the city, the conflicts generated, to better understand the changes and the land reconstructions in periurban areas. The results of the study reveal that the city of Bamako, having a rapid urbanization, develops reciprocal and complementary relationship with rural peri urban suburbs. We start from the agricultural peri-urban land uses in four local authorities Baguinéda, Sanankoroba Kambila and N'Gabacoro Droit, to study the evolution of suburban land, its mutations, the actors’ strategies and practices in land grabbing process. This is one of the causes of land conflicts involving many actors (the State, customary communities, farmers, rural citizens, individuals), to what, permanent solutions must be found. This thesis aims at analyzing the land transfers in the urban areas of Bamako and the issues that stem from them
Kouma, Mamadou. "Dynamiques périurbaines à l'épreuve de la décentralisation : l'expérience de la commune de Kalabancoro au Mali." Thesis, Paris 8, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA080002.
Full textI propose to question the modalities of establishment of communal territories, by debating decentralization, its contours and its effects on the urbanization of Bamako's periphery; but also to identify the actors located at different territorial scales, to analyze their roles in the transformation of the territory according their relations and interrelations
Dembele, Samba. "Dynamique socio-spatiale de la ville de Bamako et environs." Thesis, Normandie, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017NORMC038.
Full textThe fast growing African capital cities are facing several challenges. Perceived by rural people as a way to escape from their precarious livelihood, the capital cities remain the key destination for migrants coming from rural areas. This rural migration to capital cities is leading to disproportionate growth of these cities compare to other urban areas. Like other sub-Saharan countries, Mali is no exception to this phenomenon. Bamako the capital city of Mali is reported to accommodate 55.3% of the urban population of the country (INSTAT, 2009) whereas the underdeveloped secondary cities are less attractive to rural migrants. The aggregation of the bulk of equipment and national institutions of the country is one of the explanation to the phenomenon.The urbanisation process is then characterised by the continuing spatial spread-out of these cities. Over twenty eight years, the urban stain of Bamako has recorded an increase of 7290 ha including 17% growth in 1986 and 32% in 2014. Although several infrastructures have been developed over that period, the spatial enlargement was characterised by an outstanding expansion of the right-hand bank (of the River Niger) that hosts nowadays the bulk of Bamako population. Since a decade, the land reserves of neighbouring constituencies are officially used to fulfil the land needs of Bamako. This situation is compounded by the pursuit by urban population of land ownership, thus exacerbating the pressure on land resources of these constituencies.The depletion of the land reserves of Bamako is having an influence on the urbanisation of neighbouring constituencies. An analysis of the spatial dynamic of 4 nearest constituencies to Bamako viz. Baguineda, Sanankoroba, Siby and Dio-Gare shows that these areas were no more than villages before they start urbanising in 2000. From 1999 to 2006 the urban stains of these constituencies have recorded an average growth of 17%. The growth rate of 17% over seven years was quite sustained to reflect the way Bamako was encroaching on these constituencies. It is worth noting that the last important land reserves of Bamako were used between 1998 and 2000. This alarming spatial growth rate of the neighbouring constituencies begs for immediate measures. One of the solutions remains the shift towards the construction of high buildings. In Bamako cities, 51% of the households proved favourable to vertical buildings perceived as an opportunity to facilitate housing ownership.Indeed, the Malian capital city is facing several challenges including the access to appropriate housing, equipment, and urban services. The ongoing urbanisation programmes failed to fulfil the expectations of the great majority of households which ended up by finding their own adaptation strategy. The strategy consists of striving to save money in the view to acquire plots of land for housing. However the paradox of this situation is that it grows out of control to create conditions for high competition and dishonest businesses around land. Risk prone areas such as river beds, hill edges are more often invaded by household sin quest of ownership to housing though they have no access to urban services
Laureau, Vincent. "La ville et la terre, apprendre de Bamako : le cas de Bozobuguni, un quartier autoconstruit." Thesis, Paris 10, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA100018/document.
Full textEarth construction is becoming a popular topic in Western architecture, yet in the context of traditional Malian construction techniques earth has largely been abandoned. This paradox asks us to turn our attention to the reality on the ground in West Africa, in order to understand the implications of using earth as a building material, especially on an urban scale. Today the earthen city is essentially synonymous with cultural heritage, but there is one place where it is alive and well— informal urbanization. This sector is stimulated by the necessities of survival, which generate remarkable spatial dynamics. From this general observation, this study was narrowed to a small informal fishing district in the city of Bamako. The ultimate purpose of this research is to highlight an urban logic buried and hidden in informal space. This work consists in writing a theory of informal urbanization that is contextually and culturally specific, according to a "bottom-up" principle. The narrator takes advantage of the peculiar perspective of the traveler in order to shed light on more universal questions. Indeed, the position of the stranger allows us to see the reality of informal spaces in a new light. The act of writing makes explicit certain processes that animate the site; it develops a "point of view" that fundamentally changes urban representations. Lessons learned as well as derived from the field pave the way for certain vernacular principles to be reused on site. At the same time, such a vernacular theory allows us to transfer these principles to other sites by means of deterritorialization
Keïta, Mamadou. "Migration et accès aux services de santé dans le district de Bamako : une analyse par approche géomatique." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018REN20074.
Full textThis thesis aims to contribute to the understanding of Bamako people’s access to healthcare according to their migratory status. Indeed, despite the large share of Bamako’s populations of migrant origin, we have little knowledge of their access to health services. With geographic and geomatic tools and methods, we were able to study access to health services for native and migrant populations of Bamako. While it is undeniable that health services and especially basic services are abundant and well distributed in Bamako, it should be noted that this offer suffers from several problems such as the permanent availability of qualified personnel, the quality of services offered and the dysfunctions between health structures. Despite the abundance of healthcare in Bamako, the recourse rate remains too low. This shows that access to care is not limited to the physical availability of health facilities. The renunciation of care is explained by an interweaving of factors even if the perception of the severity of the disease, the position in the household and the profession appear more. If the study did not find notorious differences in the access to the care according to the migratory status of the population, it nevertheless showed that recourse strategies and health status change with length of residence in Bamako
Touré, Moussa. "Les avatars de la gestion urbaine à Bamako : de la logique coloniale à la logique mondiale. Essai de géographie sociale." Caen, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014CAEN1015.
Full textThis Ph. D offers a critical analysis of the stake of urban planning from Mali’s capital that is considered to be Africa’s fastest growing city. In consequence, Bamako has expended a lot. This demographic growth has been quite uncontrolled while there is no more land properties available within its limits. The city had expanded to rural outskirts (especially in the North East and South West). Land properties and housing policies that have been created have failed facing this demographic growth. The last 30 years that have followed the independence (1960) had been proved ineffective and socially selective, while land properties and housing solutions were insufficient. Private households had to find themselves solutions in constructing their own houses, without involving the Malian government: to access land property in Bamako had to pass through illegal and self-building processes. Political evolutions regarding urban planning in Bamako correspond in three important moments of its contemporary history: the colonial moment, the state moment and the globalized moment. If the to first logics could have been considered as authoritarian and centralized, the globalized moment that is taking place now tends to limit State intervention, considering that global market will regulate himself naturally. During all of those three moments, urban citizens have proved that their practices and strategies have taken the most part in creating and constructing the city. From the beginning of 1990’s, African States have been subject to a both political and economical liberalization impulse by International financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This work has three main objectives. It first tries to understand how controlled urbanization (by the State and the IFIs) works and what logics are at stake here. Then, it analyses what both the Institutions and the citizens had created. Finally, this work leads to interrogate topics such as the access to the city’s wealth and resources, the “right to the city” and mobility’s practices in Bamako
Cheick, Hamalla Fofana. "Développement industriel et croissance urbaine à Bamako." Paris 4, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA040384.
Full textThis thesis speaks about the principle of creation of companies localized in Bamako on 1960 by state in aim to transform local products and to promote availability of employment for populations needing implantation industrial indispensable to resolve the problem of employment and to improve manufactured products in the capital. The capital includes migratory populations and forms mostly urban populations (of Mali) giving the possibility to increase active populations expecting employment and manufactured products
Coulibaly, Abdourahmane. "Anthropologie d'une pratique de santé publique : le cas de la planification familiale au Mali." Paris, EHESS, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008EHES0350.
Full textThis thesis is an anthropological study of family planning in Bamako, Mali. It aims at understanding the behaviours of social actors facing family programs propositions. One of important aspects of our demonstration is the fact that the programs norms are not the only normative referents for the individuals. Among other normative universes which influence their behaviours, some value the reproduction (customs, religion) and the others the infertile sexuality and the research for the sexual pleasure (Globalized sexual models). By analyzing actors' practices, we made the report that, on one side the social actors conjugate all these normative sets in their sexual and reproductive behaviours and that, by other side, they divert the norms of the programs
Berthé, Adama. "Un aspect du changement social en Afrique : l'attrait de la ville de Bamako pour des jeunes ruraux." Paris 5, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA05H046.
Full textBooks on the topic "Urbanisation – Mali – Bamako (Mali)"
British Broadcasting Corporation. International Broadcasting and Audience Research. Survey in Bamako, Republic of Mali. London: BBC International Broadcasting & Audience Research, 1988.
Find full textDiarra, Balla. Structure urbaine et dynamique spatiale áa Bamako, Mali. Bamako: Editions Donniya, 2003.
Find full textA. C. M. van Westen. Unsettled: Low-income housing and mobility in Bamako, Mali. Utrecht: Koninklijk Nederlands Aardrijkskundig Genootschap/Faculteit Ruimtelijke Wetenschappen Universiteit Utrecht, 1995.
Find full textDiarra, Sékouba. Migration et urbanisation dans le Sahel: Le cas du Mali. [Bamako]: Comité permanent interétats de lutte contre la sécheresse dans le Sahel, Institut du Sahel, Centre d'études et de recherche sur la population pour le développement, 1993.
Find full textMarie, Zoungrana Cécile. Facteurs affectant la qualité de la surveillance prénatale à Bamako (Mali). Bamako, Mali: Centre d'Etudes et de Recherche sur la Population pour le Développement (CERPOD), 1995.
Find full textTonegutti, Raffaella Greco. Silenzio su Bamako: Il golpe in Mali e l'intervento armato internazionale. [Rome, Italy]: Editori internazionali riuniti, 2013.
Find full textContester au Mali: Formes de la mobilisation et de la critique à Bamako. Paris: Karthala, 2014.
Find full textDiarra, Tiéman. Santé, maladie et recours aux soins à Bamako (Mali): Les six esclaves du corps. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2012.
Find full textSidibé, M. Mamary. Éducation face a la mendicité en République du Mali: Cas du district de Bamako. Bamako: République du Mali, Ministère des enseignements sécondaire, supérieur et de la recherche scientifique, Direction nationale de l'enseignement supérieur et de la recherche scientifique, Ecole normale supérieure, 1996.
Find full textHamadoun, Mahalmoudou. L' essor industriel au Mali: La problèmatique des déchets de la zone industrielle de Bamako. Dakar-Ponty, Sénégal: Union pour l'étude de la population africaine, 1995.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Urbanisation – Mali – Bamako (Mali)"
Lyche, Chantal, and Ingse Skattum. "Chapter 4. The phonological characteristics of French in Bamako, Mali." In Studies in Language Variation, 73–101. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/silv.11.05lyc.
Full textBagayoko, Sidy Lamine. "Visual Studies of Community Schools in an Inner Suburb of Bamako, Mali." In The Palgrave Handbook of African Education and Indigenous Knowledge, 597–616. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38277-3_28.
Full textSidibe, Yava. "The Production and Use of Biogas: at the “Laboratoire D’energie Solaire” (LESO) in Bamako, Mali." In Biogas Technology, Transfer and Diffusion, 623–25. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-4313-1_75.
Full textMesplé-Somps, Sandrine, Anne-Sophie Robilliard, and Assa Doumbia Gakou. "Urbanisation et ségrégation spatiale à Bamako, 1998-2009." In Le Mali contemporain, 581–611. IRD Éditions, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.irdeditions.21257.
Full text"Bamako, Mali." In The Statesman’s Yearbook Companion, 456. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95839-9_916.
Full textPannke, Peter, and Thilo Thielke. "Städteporträts Bamako, Koulikoro, Gao." In Mali. Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.30965/9783657786619_017.
Full textBourdarias, Françoise. "« Nul ne peut comprendre la femme » – « Nulle ne peut comprendre l’homme ». Urbanisation et recomposition des rapports sociaux de genre à Bamako (Mali)." In Femmes et villes, 51–63. Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pufr.353.
Full text"Unknown Photographer (Bamako, Mali)." In Embodying Relation, 27–61. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv131bthz.5.
Full text"Unknown Photographer (Bamako, Mali)." In Embodying Relation, 26–61. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478007340-002.
Full textSchneider, Marius, and Vanessa Ferguson. "Mali." In Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights in Africa. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198837336.003.0035.
Full textConference papers on the topic "Urbanisation – Mali – Bamako (Mali)"
Téguété, Ibrahima, Fatoumata Korika Tounkara, Seydou Fane, Abdoulaye Sissoko, and Youssouf Traore. "P299 Epidemiology of sexually transmitted infections at gabriel toure teaching hospital, bamako, mali." In Abstracts for the STI & HIV World Congress (Joint Meeting of the 23rd ISSTDR and 20th IUSTI), July 14–17, 2019, Vancouver, Canada. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2019-sti.414.
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