350 research outputs found

    Cashew nut shell liquid: an agricultural by-product with great potential for commercial exploitation in Kenya

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    Cashew nut shell liquid (CNSL) is the main by‐product from cashew nuts processing and is obtained during roasting of the nuts by the oil‐bath method. It may also be obtained through expression of residual shells or solvent extraction of the pulverized shells. Kenya has the potential to produce 200,000 Tonnes of cashew nuts and  5,000 Tonnes of CNSL if all the nuts were to be processed locally and with recovery of the liquid. Currently, the country realizes only about 5‐10% of its nuts production potential. Processing of the nuts has been left to small scale processors who in many cases, burn residue shells as fuel or as waste. This practice pollutes the environment profoundly through emission of thick dark smoke with particulate matter. No CNSL is recovered in Kenya currently. The aim of this review paper is to highlight a number of products which can be manufactured in Kenya based on research initially done at Kenya Industrial Research and Development Institute and more recently at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology Recovery of CNSL and its exploitation in Kenya will not only enhance the economic returns to the cashew industry but also contribute significantly to conservation of the environment. It is recommended that further work be done to scale‐up production of CNSL based products and demonstrate feasibility of the same. Production and local processing of the cashew nuts accompanied by recovery of CNSL should be enhanced.Key words: Cashew nuts, CNSL utilization, cashew nut production, Keny

    Dancing the Pluriverse: Indigenous Performance as Ontological Praxis

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    This article discusses ways that Indigenous dance is an ontological praxis that is embodied and telluric, meaning “of the earth.” It looks at how dancing bodies perform in relationship to ecosystems and entities within them, producing ontological distinctions and hierarchies that are often imbued with power. This makes dance a site of ontological struggle that potentially challenges the delusional ontological universality undergirding imperialism, genocide, and ecocide. The author explores these theoretical propositions through her participation in Oxlaval Q'anil, an emerging Ixil Maya dance project in Guatemala, and Dancing Earth, an itinerant and inter-tribal U.S.-based company founded by Rulan Tangen eleven years ago

    Low-Cost Sensors and Multitemporal Remote Sensing for Operational Turbidity Monitoring in an East African Wetland Environment

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    Many wetlands in East Africa are farmed and wetland reservoirs are used for irrigation, livestock, and fishing. Water quality and agriculture have a mutual influence on each other. Turbidity is a principal indicator of water quality and can be used for, otherwise, unmonitored water sources. Low-cost turbidity sensors improve in situ coverage and enable community engagement. The availability of high spatial resolution satellite images from the Sentinel-2 multispectral instrument and of bio-optical models, such as the Case 2 Regional CoastColor (C2RCC) processor, has fostered turbidity modeling. However, these models need local adjustment, and the quality of low-cost sensor measurements is debated. We tested the combination of both technologies to monitor turbidity in small wetland reservoirs in Kenya. We sampled ten reservoirs with low-cost sensors and a turbidimeter during five Sentinel-2 overpasses. Low-cost sensor calibration resulted in an R 2 of 0.71. The models using the C2RCC C2X-COMPLEX (C2XC) neural nets with turbidimeter measurements (R 2 = 0.83) and with low-cost measurements (R 2 = 0.62) performed better than the turbidimeter-based C2X model. The C2XC models showed similar patterns for a one-year time series, particularly around the turbidity limit set by Kenyan authorities. This shows that both the data from the commercial turbidimeter and the low-cost sensor setup, despite sensor uncertainties, could be used to validate the applicability of C2RCC in the study area, select the better-performing neural nets, and adapt the model to the study site. We conclude that combined monitoring with low-cost sensors and remote sensing can support wetland and water management while strengthening community-centered approaches.</p

    Race, resistance and translation: the case of John Buchan’s UPrester John

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    In postcolonial translation studies, increasing attention is being given to the asymmetrical relationships between dominant and indigenous languages. This paper argues that John Francis Cele’s UPrester John (1958), is not simply a subordinated and obeisant translation of John Buchan’s adventure thriller Prester John (1910), but a more complex form of textuality that is both oppositional and complicit with the workings of apartheid. Although Cele’s translation reproduces Buchan’s story of a daring young Scotsman who single-handedly quells a black nationalist uprising, it also ameliorates the novel’s racist language and assumption. Cele’s translation practice is examined in the context of apartheid publishing and Bantu education.Web of Scienc

    Roadside air pollutants along elected roads in Nairobi City, Kenya

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    This paper presents a statistical analysis of air quality monitoring in Nairobi city, at three major roads and Industrial Area, a site closer to the main industrial activities. The study was carried out using different gas analyzers and samplers. From the statistical analysis it was found that, there were extremely high values of black carbon which went beyond the upper limit of the instruments (50,000 Ƌg/m3) during the day on Ladhis road. Nakumatt Junction site recorded extreme values of Black carbon (14,008 Ƌg/m3) in the evening hours, while at Pangani Roundabout site, the diurnal mean value was extreme (14,446.5 Ƌg/m3) for the period. None of the four sites exceeded the WHO 24 h limit for both PM10 (50 ÎŒg/ m3) and PM2.5 (25 ÎŒg/m3). The 24 h mean values of PM10 in the three sites also did not exceed the ambient air quality tolerance Kenyan limit of 100 ÎŒg/Nm3 and 150 ÎŒg/Nm3 in industrial area. The diurnal mean of SO2 over the four sites was generally low with the highest amount of 1.08 ppb recorded at Pangani Roundabout. This amount is far much below the diurnal WHO and Kenyan limit of 10 ppb and 48 ppb respectively. The global background concentration of carbon monoxide ranges between 0.05-0.12 ppm. The mean 24 h amount of CO in all the sites was above the background concentration, with Pangani Roundabout recording the highest amount of 1.73 ppm. The eight h means for ozone in all the sites were below WHO limit of 51 ppb with the highest amount of 20.2 ppb recorded in industrial area

    The aesthetics and politics of ‘reading together’ Moroccan novels in Arabic and French

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    This paper attempts to break down the common practices of reading multilingual Moroccan novels, particularly Moroccan postcolonial novels in Arabic and French. I argue that dominant reading practices are based on binary oppositions marked by a reductionist understanding of language and cultural politics in Morocco. They place the Moroccan novel in Arabic and French in independent traditions with the presupposition that they have no impact on each other, thereby reifying each tradition. They also ignore the similar historical, social and cultural context from which these novels emerge, and tend to reinforce the marginalisation of the Moroccan novel within hegemonic single-language literary systems such as the Francophone or Arabic literary traditions. I advocate ‘reading together’ – or an entangled comparative reading of – postcolonial Moroccan novels in Arabic and French, a reading that privileges the specificity of the literary traditions in Morocco rather than language categorisation, and that considers their mutual historical, cultural, geographical, political, and aesthetic interweaving and implications

    Secondary education reform in Lesotho and Zimbabwe and the needs of rural girls: Pronouncements, policy and practice

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    Analysis of the educational needs of rural girls in Lesotho and Zimbabwe suggests a number of shortcomings in the current form of secondary education, and ways in which it might be modified so as to serve this sizeable group of students better. Several of the shortcomings, notably in relation to curricular irrelevance and excessive focus on examinations, have long been recognised, including by politicians. Yet political pronouncements are seldom translated into policy, and even where policy is formulated, reforms are seldom implemented in schools. This paper makes use of interviews with educational decision-makers in the two southern African countries and a range of documentary sources to explore why, despite the considerable differences between the two contexts, much needed educational reforms have been implemented in neither
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