tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.comments2023-09-07T21:23:56.922+02:00PPgis.net BlogGiacomohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02933246483952242326noreply@blogger.comBlogger48125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-1718315327414352502016-11-28T19:29:51.219+01:002016-11-28T19:29:51.219+01:00For anyone interested, we are making the crop loss...For anyone interested, we are making the crop loss analysis using drones simple and easy for anyone to do, farmer and insurer, using our software that turns your drone maps into damage reports, check it out: http://skymatics.com/skyclaim/Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-55396930335386157852016-09-22T09:01:34.911+02:002016-09-22T09:01:34.911+02:00thanksthanksAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04571828795230778384noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-38400938888373275972016-08-05T15:11:10.347+02:002016-08-05T15:11:10.347+02:00Drone sales are on the rise with each passing year...Drone sales are on the rise with each passing year and more and more people are embracing the idea of owning such devices. With all the attention, these unmanned aerial vehicles are now finding more practical and innovative drone uses. See more <a href="http://mydronelab.com/blog/drone-uses.html" rel="nofollow">http://mydronelab.com/blog/drone-uses.html</a><br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15146148127146749890noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-60302259724394972632016-07-25T06:35:37.018+02:002016-07-25T06:35:37.018+02:00ThanksThanksAhamedhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16941590433247270275noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-49535916859893175912016-05-24T23:29:18.866+02:002016-05-24T23:29:18.866+02:00Hi Rups, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/u...Hi Rups, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/uav4ag and on www.twitter.com/ppgis as we have activities with pastoralist communities in Uganda.<br />Giacomohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02933246483952242326noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-78514582611459544302016-05-24T13:53:46.787+02:002016-05-24T13:53:46.787+02:00The ideas and strategies was very informative give...<br />The ideas and strategies was very informative given by you.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.rcbazaar.com/" rel="nofollow">Aeromodelling</a>rcplaneshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17383148211021830806noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-27795781965241934032016-05-24T12:54:51.551+02:002016-05-24T12:54:51.551+02:00This is great! I am working in East Africa mostly ...This is great! I am working in East Africa mostly with the pastoralists and we working in the arid and semi-arid areas where vastness and infrastructure is a constant problem. I would be very interested to know the results from this pilot and more so the challenges that are being faced during this pilot phase Rupshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06503737034474713300noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-39675976821766952222014-09-13T19:54:56.204+02:002014-09-13T19:54:56.204+02:00Please, be informed, I live in the same province, ...Please, be informed, I live in the same province, in about 30 kilometer southwards of that site. How can I take a certain participation for this program?Cahyanahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08226933176085593398noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-58101411473888314562014-09-13T17:55:41.020+02:002014-09-13T17:55:41.020+02:00I do thank you for the chance to know more about s...I do thank you for the chance to know more about successful early step of development program that has also encouraged village people to participate in the plan. In Indonesia I have rarely found such of planning model, so I take a bold note of this news for my referenceCahyanahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08226933176085593398noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-87816146172396918962014-07-12T14:05:02.118+02:002014-07-12T14:05:02.118+02:00Wow, sounds like a lot of "great expectations...Wow, sounds like a lot of "great expectations" an exciting assignment.<br />Good luck Ana!rodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18371647342811303838noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-75660727467802576282014-03-26T08:50:39.413+01:002014-03-26T08:50:39.413+01:00solita storia di soprusi, e meno male che per una ...solita storia di soprusi, e meno male che per una volta c'è chi protegge i diritti dei più indifesi. cristinacristina1953https://www.blogger.com/profile/06544339509389552242noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-80377497343038653582012-07-16T10:19:17.426+02:002012-07-16T10:19:17.426+02:00Thanks new thing I always love to read.
3d printin...Thanks new thing I always love to read.<br /><a href="http://www.ems-usa.com" rel="nofollow">3d printing service</a>rahulhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05861399620503614382noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-88637353950615156472012-05-01T16:01:09.661+02:002012-05-01T16:01:09.661+02:00Babongo / Pygmy - Having asked different communiti...Babongo / Pygmy - Having asked different communities around Gabon on what they prefer to be called, including these communities. Different communities have different preferences. Babongo is a Bantu word and is also seen as derogatory by certain communities, including some around Ikobey, who have expressed to me that they prefer to be called Pygmies. These Babongo communities are the ones off the road and in the forest (be more than happy to take you there). On the other hand there are also communities around Ikobey that prefer Babongo, these ones seem to be the communities that live next to the Mitsogo. <br /><br />Terrirtory - Yes Linguistically this is the home of the Prot-itsogho-himba see Klieman work. And Dapper in his 1600s work hints that the Babongo were in the area at that time.<br />But the late 1800 to early 1900 brought major disturbances to all the ethnicities in Gabon, what with the arrival of the Europeans and the Fang migration South. This resulted du-Challiu expedition to the South of the area finding that the whole area was empty of villages (the only place in Gabon that he found this) and what Christopher Gray (2002) called a dead zone in the area. This dead-zone can also be seen in the early 1900s Avelot ethnic maps and in the writing of Raponda-Walker. <br /><br />The migration of the Fang resulted in a Southern migration of the Akele, a warrior tribe, that took over the area between the late 1800s and early 1900s. The first white person in the Ikobey area (an SHO agent) only recounts trading with the Akele not the Mitsogo or the Babongo. Furthermore both the Mitsogo and Babongo around Ikobey will tell you that they avoided areas where they saw casse-a-dent, a type of manioc, that is only eaten by the Akele. Since the Akele tended either to take others as slaves or push them out (see raponda-walker and Gray). The names of the rivers and mountains around the Ikobey area are all in Akele, not Mitsogo or Babongo. If you really want to know about the area then should talk to the remaining Akele in Sindara.<br />The Mitsogo were able to halt the Akele advance on the Mimongo side of the moutnains.<br />Between the 1920s to 1930s disease wiped out many villages around Ikobey and along the Ikoy, some elderly still remember this period, resulting in the Ikobey becoming a Taboo area for everyone (Akele, Mitsogo and Babongo).<br />Only in the 1960s do both the Babongo, Mitsogo and remaining Akele migrate back into the area. coming to the area due to French loggers. In all the villages, above Ikobey, be they Mitsogo or Babongo the 1960s migration story is similar, only the rivers down which they migrated from Mimongo differ. Some used the Ikobey, river others the Oumba and the final lot of migration down the Ikoy river.<br />There are some 1950s aerial photos, that I have had a chance to glance at, and it can clearly be seen that there are no villages in the Ikobey area. While the area around old Mimongo and Mount-Ibondgi has many villages. Now if one went to Mount-Ibondgi, through the forest (which I have), and asked a guide about the various old village sites in the area, you will find that they are many Akele villages some Simba villages some Mitsogo villages but few Babongo villages. In fact a UOB linguist student has been doing his PHD on Babongo linguistics has seemed to have found that the current group of Babongo in the Ikobey area are from further south, as seen by their use of Bantu words from the South.<br />This does not mean that before the 1960s and certainly before the Akele advance that there were no Babongo in the area, just it was not the ones that are currently there.ohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03997521010475399554noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-25560607559045862602012-03-22T11:02:39.150+01:002012-03-22T11:02:39.150+01:00Babongo is the term used by the community people w...Babongo is the term used by the community people while we were visiting villages in the Ikobey commune. You will see the Babongo chief using this language in the video. Pygmy is evidently a non-African term which is still in usage, and which some people consider to be derogatory and others still use. If you know of community people using another appellation for themselves, it would be welcome if you'd share this. <br /><br />Linguistically, this territory has been the heartland of the Babongo / Mitsogho language cluster for centuries. It is strange to assert categorically that occupation is recent. Both communities have had to move several times due to colonial factors. <br />The oral history places Mount Iboundji within the Babongo heartland. It is likely that there have been repeated migrations within this area, including the possible separation of Babongo and Mitsogho communities from one another which is possibly the reason for the language differentiation between the two. <br /><br />During the mapping, Babongo elders also recounted that they had reoccuppied this area in the 20th century, but that does not mean it was not historically an aboriginal territory. If you look at the antiquity of the topographical language between the Mitsogho and Babongo, which is shared to a remarkable degree, you can see it is specialised to the landscape of the du Chaillu massif. This shared language is not recent, as shown by sound shifts, it evidently dates back several centuries if not millennia.Nigelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17174604208037975440noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-18731272905060752242012-03-20T16:01:11.881+01:002012-03-20T16:01:11.881+01:00Some corrections to your article
1) The logging r...Some corrections to your article<br /><br />1) The logging road was first constructed by a European forestry company in the 1960s. It followed a old caravan route used in 1900s to 1920 by the SHO.<br /><br /><br />2) The Babongo, and Mitsogo, have only been in this area since the 1960s, attracted to the area by the arrival of a forestry company. The area was empty between 1930s and 1960s, a period when villages were wiped out due to disease. Before the 1930s the area was part of the French SHO concession in which the lived the Akele. Many of the local landmarks in the are have Akele names. The Akele are a warring peoples who did not allow others onto their land. They probably arrived in the area in the 1860s being pushed south due to the Fang migration occurring in the north of Gabon.<br /><br />3) Nets are not used in this area to hunt.<br /><br />4) The Babongo started to become sedentary in the 1930s. They have been part of the cash economy for a long time selling bushmeat for iron and other items. Some of the Babongo villages are in the deep forest, due to recent past conflict with their neighbours<br /><br />5) Women also fish<br /><br />6) There is a Waka river, and a Waka village, though this is to the west of the park and not to the north from where the people used in this mapping come from <br /><br />7) Babogno is also a derogatory term, which was given to the Pygmies by their Bantu neighbours. The preference of Pygmy or Babongo depends on which Pygmy village you talk to.<br /><br />8) The Babongo women always have plantations not sometimes. In fact their diet is mostly made up of products from these plantations. And not animals products.ohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03997521010475399554noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-29146409623760774452011-11-19T03:52:12.785+01:002011-11-19T03:52:12.785+01:00Most inspiring. It shows how a collective approach...Most inspiring. It shows how a collective approach can aid the development and preservation of the land and its people.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08135229352451654738noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-39866288083020451652011-09-21T18:54:11.449+02:002011-09-21T18:54:11.449+02:00Muy interesante el sistema, además de permitir lle...Muy interesante el sistema, además de permitir llevar <a href="http://www.iliacapacitacion.cl" rel="nofollow">cursos de capacitación</a> a la gente utilizando tecnologías, es lo que hay que promover, haré llegar este link a algunos amigos.<br /><br />Saludos.ILIA capacitacionhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17431078436444557664noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-50839943627666086132011-09-21T01:36:57.012+02:002011-09-21T01:36:57.012+02:00Giacomo eccellente lavoro ,congratulazioni.Ti scri...Giacomo eccellente lavoro ,congratulazioni.Ti scrive Ettore del Monte, (delmontesga.com.ve)otdelmonte@gmail.com<br />ho molto interesse nel tuo lavoro ,e se possibile, visitarti a Manaos.<br />Saluti cari dal Venezuela.ETTOREhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07349356218722815683noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-68255226301995122082011-06-03T09:02:26.469+02:002011-06-03T09:02:26.469+02:00I am excited about the potential of community mapp...I am excited about the potential of community mapping for development. Dig the site!Jasonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17162527239228375591noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-49541193559225192852011-04-10T01:38:01.160+02:002011-04-10T01:38:01.160+02:00Very good PPGIS video. It shows the active involve...Very good PPGIS video. It shows the active involvement of the local community in shaping their destiny through the eyes of a map.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03464176222369254789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-25783128998017965932011-03-09T12:51:12.525+01:002011-03-09T12:51:12.525+01:00Interesantísimo, muchas gracias. Roger Longhorn lo...Interesantísimo, muchas gracias. Roger Longhorn lo ha redistribuido a través de la Legal-Socioecon mailing list de la GSDI. Creo que bien vale la pena difundirlo. Saludos,<br />Sergio Acosta y Lara<br />Departamento de Información Geográfica<br />Dirección Nacional de Topografía - MTOP<br />integrante del Grupo de Trabajo IDE (GTIDE-AGESIC)Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07468289870982891868noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-8315088207247846622011-03-06T02:59:48.797+01:002011-03-06T02:59:48.797+01:00Estimado Giacomo Rambaldi y Equipo
Felicitaciones...Estimado Giacomo Rambaldi y Equipo<br /><br />Felicitaciones por el trabajo y muchísimas gracias por la publicación del "Kit de Capacitación sobre Manejo y Comunicación Participativos de la Información Territorial" así como toda la información que periódicamente recibo de su parte, herramientas de suma utilidad para quienes trabajamos cotidianamente con la temática de los reclamos territoriales de las comunidades indígenas y campesinas y la cartografía participativa. Saludos.<br /><br />Carlos Chiappe<br />Universidad Nacional de Tres de Febrero<br />Instituto Nacional de Asuntos Indígenas - Ministerio de Desarrollo Social de la Nación<br />República ArgentinaXipe Totechttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15380618110205338795noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-4752285965778418392011-03-05T19:39:16.860+01:002011-03-05T19:39:16.860+01:00Estimado Giacomo y equipo de trabajo y gestor del ...Estimado Giacomo y equipo de trabajo y gestor del IAPAD<br /><br />Muchisimas gracias por este gran material que ponen a nuestra disposición, ciertamente es un gran complemento que nos brinda importantes herramientas de apoyo para las investigaciones y labores que adelantamos en esta área para beneficio de nuestras comunidades.<br /><br />Desde hace unos años he venido revisando con especial interés las publicaciones y material que han publicado a través de la página de l IAPAD y el foro sobre PPGIS, he de reconocer con gratitud que la información y experiencias compartidas hacen parte de la base que he construido para la aplicación de este proceso en comunidades étnicas principalmente.<br /><br />Un gran abrazo y con sinceros deseos de que se haga el mejor uso de este Kit.<br /><br />Angela López<br />Ingeniera Catastral y Geodesta<br />Asociación Tejiendo Amazonas TEJAMA<br />Amazonas-Colombiaangel♌mazonas ❧ ヅhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14207990396381436193noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-2580924686763738332011-02-12T19:12:35.097+01:002011-02-12T19:12:35.097+01:00The Philippine Daily Inquirer just published this ...The Philippine Daily Inquirer just published this interesting article By Gina Lopez:<a href="http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20110207-318887/Guardians-or-opportunists" rel="nofollow"><br />Guardians or opportunists?</a>Giacomohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02933246483952242326noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8605125.post-61656888627597165412011-02-04T09:52:11.510+01:002011-02-04T09:52:11.510+01:00Visit our website www.pcsd.ph regarding the real s...Visit our website www.pcsd.ph regarding the real score on mining in PalawanRA7611https://www.blogger.com/profile/17637926455933945865noreply@blogger.com