Has the sustainable development goal of reducing the proportion of youths not in education, employment or training by 2020 been met in Africa?
In: Vulnerable children and youth studies, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 298-308
ISSN: 1745-0136
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In: Vulnerable children and youth studies, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 298-308
ISSN: 1745-0136
In: South African journal of international affairs: journal of the South African Institute of International Affairs, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 389-390
ISSN: 1938-0275
In: Transposition: musique et sciences sociales, Heft 10
ISSN: 2110-6134
In: Rural sociology, Band 87, Heft 2, S. 642-645
ISSN: 1549-0831
In: The China quarterly, Band 250, S. 579-581
ISSN: 1468-2648
In: Gender and development, Band 30, Heft 1-2, S. 321-339
ISSN: 1364-9221
In: Environmental science and pollution research: ESPR, Band 29, Heft 38, S. 58263-58277
ISSN: 1614-7499
In: Journal of colonialism & colonial history, Band 23, Heft 1
ISSN: 1532-5768
In: In Liliana Lyra Jubilut et al (eds.), Direitos Humanos e Vulnerabilidade e Migrações Forçadas
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Thomas Pringle, a Scottish settler at the Cape Colony and later secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society in England, was both a settler in territory recently conquered from the Xhosa and an advocate against violence on Eastern Cape borderlands. This article examines both aspects of his career in the 1820s and early 1830s, and asks how they relate to one another. While working to put accounts of abuse into trans-imperial circulation, Pringle was caught up in the structures of settler colonialism at the Cape, including militarization and the quest for African labour. The evidence he provided was nonetheless politically significant. The article places Pringle's work in the context of a larger history of the development of human rights and their interaction with both humanitarianism and colonialism. The article further asks what difference, if any, Pringle's Scottishness made to his own sense of identity, political activity and views of colonialism.
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In: Ab imperio: studies of new imperial history and nationalism in the Post-Soviet space, Band 2022, Heft 1, S. 293-297
ISSN: 2164-9731
In: African economic history, Band 50, Heft 1, S. 12-42
ISSN: 2163-9108