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Programmes indicatifs de l'aide financière de la CEE durant la Convention de Lomé dans 13 pays d'Afrique Noire francophone
In: Bulletin de l'Afrique noire, Band 21, S. 18677-18678
ISSN: 0045-3501, 0153-4157
La coopération administrative entre la CEE et les États d'Afrique, des Caraïbes et du Pacifique dans le cadre de la Convention de Lomé
In: Revue française d'administration publique, Band 50, Heft 1, S. 89-101
Administrative co-operation between the EEC and the African, Caribbean and Pacific States (ACP) under the Lomé Convention
Administrative co-operation forms the core of the operations financed by the European Development Fund (EDF). The assistance provided by the EEC to the public services of the ACP States can either accompany specific operations linked to the implémentation of development programmes and projects ; take the form of a specific project for developing the management skills of a department of public service ; or form part of a planned sériés of concerted actions aimed at revamping and rationalizing administrative structures. Coupled with this co-operation, the author underlines the need to stick to the original management tools used in implementing financial and technical co-operation, and shows how these original arrangements work in the administration of public contracts. In his conclusion, the author urges the negotiators at Lomé IV to consider ways of making better use of national human ressources so as to promote a genuine spirit of reciprocity and partnership between the foreign teams of technocrats and national civil servants and thereby enhance the effectiveness of administrative co-operation.
La convention de Lomé: diagnostics, méthodes d'évaluation et perspectives; [Contributions au colloque organisé à Paris, le 27 juin 1997]
In: Cahier du GEMDEV 25
Fertilizer use at the village level: constraints and impacs ; summary proceedings of Workshop, Lomé, togo, October 2-8, 1991
In: Special publication 20
Contributing to the achievement of sustainable development goals: knowledge on water, sanitation and health risk in Cotonou and Lomé cities
In: International journal of sustainable development & world ecology, Band 29, Heft 2, S. 164-175
ISSN: 1745-2627
Les étrangers d'Afrique de l'Ouest à Lomé (Togo) : identification, visibilité et citadinité. Réflexions au regard de la ville d'Accra (Ghana)
In: Insaniyat: revue algérienne d'anthropologie et de sciences sociales, Heft 47-48, S. 207-208
ISSN: 2253-0738
Les étrangers d'Afrique de l'Ouest à Lomé (Togo) : identification, visibilité et citadinité*: Réflexions au regard de la ville d'Accra (Ghana)
In: Les cahiers d'EMAM: études sur le Monde arabe et la Méditerranée, Heft 19, S. 94
ISSN: 2102-6416
The Relevance of Inter-Regional Co-Operation (Lomé II, STABEX) for the NIEO and for Regional and Subregional Integration in Africa
In: Österreichische Zeitschrift für Öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht; New Perspectives and Conceptions of International Law, S. 75-89
La coopération minière dans Lomé II [treaty between the European economic community and 59 developing countries, signed Oct. 31, 1979]
In: Revue du marché commun, S. 59-62
ISSN: 0035-2616
La Convention de Lomé. Nouvelles formes de la coopération entre la C.E.E. et les Etats d´ Afrique, des Caraibes et du Pacifique
In: Verfassung und Recht in Übersee: VRÜ = World comparative law : WCL, Band 11, Heft 4, S. 457-458
ISSN: 0506-7286
Les hommes au travail... domestique en Afrique de l'Ouest: L'effet modéré des reconfigurations du travail féminin sur les masculinités à Dakar et à Lomé
In: Cahiers du genre, Band 67, Heft 2, S. 97-119
ISSN: 1968-3928
Cet article interroge, dans une perspective croisant données quantitatives et qualitatives, les reconfigurations de la participation des hommes au travail domestique induites par l'implication accrue des femmes sur le marché du travail et dans les dépenses des ménages à Dakar et à Lomé. Ces changements jouent à la marge sur l'implication des hommes et leur participation reste faible, ponctuelle et centrée sur certaines tâches très spécifiques, et plus encore à Dakar qu'à Lomé. À côté d'une masculinité dominante axée sur le modèle idéalisé du male breadwinner, semblent émerger d'autres pratiques, se déroulant dans l'intimité du foyer, et principalement autour de l'éducation des enfants. Mais celles-ci s'inscrivent dans le prolongement du rôle de chef de famille et s'apparentent à des reconfigurations obligées de pratiques masculines privées de leur terrain d'expression et de structuration habituelle (la prise en charge matérielle du groupe familial).
Human rights and the ACP [African, Caribbean and Pacific states]-EEC Lomé II convention: business as usual at the EEC
In: New York University journal of international law & politics, Band 13, S. 63-98
ISSN: 0028-7873
"Diritto di fatto alla città". Soggettività dei cittadini sfollati o ricollocati e riordino neoliberale dello spazio a Città del Capo e Lomé
International audience ; The literature on the right to the city, which has seen a major resurgence in recent years, focuses primarily on two subjects, which specifically interrogate the relationship of city-dwellers to the State: social movements/urban citizenship. In order that the claim of a right to the city might be codified, whether overtly or implicitly, numerous works (Purcell, Kyumulu, etc.) also emphasize the extent to which the right to the city manifests in widely diverse "questions", any of which may well contradict or be in competition with any other.In the framework of a comparative research program (DALVAA "Rethinking the right to the city from the Southern cities – perspectives on sub Saharan Africa/Latin America) we distance ourselves from these uses of the idea of right to the city and their emancipatory political ambitions. We put forth the right to the city as an exploratory notion that interrogates the processes of organization and normalization of postcolonial urban societies, from which we posit the hypothesis that they are partly marked by neoliberal rationalities currently under construction. The goal is to shift the analytical focus from an anti-establishment social group, politically constructed in conflict, to the subject ("the individual in socialization" to use Henri Lefebvre's phrase), understood through his social and spatial practices. Through this shifting of focus, we aim to reveal the modes of control and the exercise of power in the city. Analyzing on the micro level, we attempt to interrogate the processes of the construction of norms through the prism of the position of subjects in the practices of control of public space. In Cape Town and Lomé, forms of resistance and of production of counter-rationalities in ordinary, and not conflictual or post-crisis, space-time will be analyzed using qualitative field data.In Cape Town, we will analyze the control of a central historic square, which has been heritage-ized and "beautified" in the framework of a politics of neoliberal urban regeneration, the Greenmarket Square. This square is occupied by an "African" market, where artisanal items are sold, whose place in this urban project was renegotiated and redefined at the time of the FIFA World Cup (2010). Five years after this moment of crisis, we wonder about the functioning of spatial control through the new routines that were then established and the evolution of the individual and collective entrepreneurial subjectivities of the merchants in the square. In Lomé, our reflection will begin with the post-flight spaces, in particular in Djagblé (on the northeast edge of Grand Lomé), where citizens who fled due to the creation of the Grand highway bypass of Lomé between 2011 and 2014 were relocated. This large urban project, mostly financed by Chinese investors and with the strong support of the government, is a showcase for the modernization of the capital. The seizure of the necessary real estate for the creation of this large road (particularly to the east of the Tsévié road) led to the destruction of multiple places of residence and to the displacement of the commercial activities previously practiced there. The initial terms were negotiated by the CII (Interministerial Indemnity Committee) and varied widely from case to case. The responsible parties at the CII effectively compensated families differently while relying on certain residents to relate the politics of displacement in a way that might be acceptable to those affected. Meanwhile at the relocation sites, major conflicts over real estate arose between the original occupants and the residents affected by the urban project. How do these power dynamics create an alliance with or an opposition to the Ministry of Urbanization and the urban authorities tasked with taking action in the area on the outer edges of Grand Lomé? What can we learn from the practices of those affected, as well as from those citizens of the transformed site, about the acceptance of a new order and a new norm in the outer neighborhoods? In areas affected by forced removals, routine practices prevail while very little contestation to the urban project is observed, the differential treatment and the powerful coercion that accompanied the departure of those affected being rarely condemned.
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