File is an audio reel containing an interview with Eugenia Asabia Cooper, a Ghanaian musician, for "Women on the Move." The interview aired April 23, 1990 and was rebroadcast April 23, 1990 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs program.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Ed Tompkins, the national secretary for Oxfam, on his trip to South Africa and Mozambique. The interview aired April 10, 1987 and was rebroadcast June 1, 1987 on Title Waves, a CKDU radio program.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Dr. Gerlad Helleiner of the University of Toronto. Dr. Helleiner spoke with CKDU's John Cairncross while he was in Halifax on the African debt crisis. The interview aired May 13, 1988 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs program, and was rebroadcast July 11, 1988 on Title Waves, another CKDU radio program.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Dr. Anthony Minaar, a visiting researcher to Dalhousie University from the Centre of Conflict Analysis in Pretoria, South Africa. He spoke with CKDU's JoAnn Citrigno about the causes of continuing violence in Natal. The interview is in two parts. In part 1 (27 min., 20 sec.), they discuss the history of the conflict and in part 2 (12 min., 30 sec.) they discuss the roles played by the African National Congress, the Inkatha Freedom Party, and the government of South Africa. Technical production of the interview was by Spike Taylor. The interview aired November 25, 1992 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs program, and was rebroadcast December 17, 1992 and May 19, 1994 on The Evening Affair.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Dr. Andrew Link, a pediatrics resident at the Izaak Walton Killam (IWK) Hospital in Halifax. Dr. Link spoke with CKDU's Angela Yazbek about his work in Ehtiopia. The interview aired January 18, 1988 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs program.
File is an audio reel containing a live interview with Achila Isaiah, a third year Dalhousie student from Kenya who worked in the media in Swaziland and Kenya. The interview was on constraints in the media in Africa and was part of the Wireless, a morning program on CKDU, hosted by Molly McCarron. The interview is in two parts: the first is 17 min. and 52 sec.; the second is 8 min. and 8 sec. The interview aired November 26, 1991. The first part was rebroadcast November 27, 1991 on Title Waves, and April 26, 1994. The second part was rebroadcast December 12, 1991 on Title Waves; April 1, 1992 on Title Waves; and April 25, 1994 on The Evening Affair.
File contains a computer printout dataset of frequency distribution comparison between Jane Murphy's and Alex Inkeles' data. Also includes copies of several of Inkeles' published articles: "The fate of personal adjustment in the process of modernization," "The OM scale: a comparative socio-psychological measure of individual modernity," "Some social psychological effects and noneffects of literacy in a new nation," "The modernization of man," and "Making men modern: on the causes and consequences of individual change in six developing countries."
File contains social and historical research notes and population medical survey results for several villages. File includes two hand-drawn maps and several lists of names.
File contains notes, charts, and datasets tracking the occupations and education levels of the husbands of female study respondents. File also includes correspondence between researchers and Aro Hospital regarding education and migration statistics.
File contains charts, calculations, datasets, and graphs tracking education and age. File also includes notes on the relationship between education level and mental health.
File contains notes and information on villages in the Egba region of Nigeria. Also includes memos from Charles C. Hughes containing travel observations and village statistics.
File contains catalogue cards that are filled with handwritten bibliographic and terminology entries related to James Morrison's thesis on the Jos Plateau. The cards are organized into sections related to bibliographic references and terminology related to the Indigenous groups that Morrison studied on the Jos Plateau, these are also referenced in full in the Oral history research notebooks series.
File contains catalogue cards that are filled with handwritten entries on secondary sources, terminology definitions, contact information and research notes. Some of the catalogue cards are organized alphabetically and the rest are organized by topics which include: Africa, Thesis Oral, Production, Trade, Tin, Government. The file also contains a handwritten letter addressed to Jim and Sheila Morrison from Musa Borodo.
Item is a typed version of James Morrison's paper from 1974 entitled "Impact of tin mining on the indigenous peoples of the Jos Plateau, Nigeria, 1904 -1935". The papers are enclosed in an envelope from the University Bookshop Nigeria ltd.
File contains social and historical research notes and population medical survey results for the village of Ilewo. File includes two hand-drawn maps of the village. Researchers considered the village modern.
File contains social and historical research notes and population medical survey results for the village of Ikereku. File includes three hand-drawn maps of the village. Researchers considered the village modern.
File contains social and historical research notes and population medical survey results for the village of Ijeun-Lukosi. File includes two hand-drawn maps of the village. Researchers considered the village modern.
File contains social and historical research notes and population medical survey results for the village of Ijeja Kenta. File includes two hand-drawn maps of the village. Researchers considered the village traditional.
File contains social and historical research notes and population medical survey results for the village of Idi-Ori. File includes two hand-drawn maps of the village.
Item contains one bound diary from the years 1969 to 1971 used by James Morrison in Nigeria. The diary has a brown and black cover and contains notes related to James Morrison's travel and research in Nigeria. The item contains diary entries on Morrison's personal life and day to day events.
Item contains one bound diary from 1971 used by James Morrison in Nigeria. The diary has an orange cover and contains notes related to James Morrison's travel and research in Nigeria. The item contains diary entries on Morrison's personal life and day to day events.
Item contains one clothbound diary for the year 1975 used by James Morrison in Nigeria. The diary has a red cover and contains notes related to travel and research in Nigeria and Nova Scotia. The diary contains contact information for colleagues and venues. The end sheets are colour maps of Nigeria.
File consists of patient medical records. Each patient's bundle of records includes a laboratory service result, medicine card, medical and family history, and summary of illness.
File contains HOS calculations, a copy of a psychiatric questionnaire, and HOS source card with marginals. Also includes correspondence between Alice Longaker, Veronica Shaw, Laurel Hodgden, and Jane Murphy discussing coding and psychiatric data.
File contains printouts of computer code, datasets and statistics on respondents' occupations and economic status, and notes on coding education data. File also includes a copy of "Two factor index of social position" by August B. Hollingshead.
File consists of a notebook of drawings created by James H. Morrison, and three maps of the Jos Plateau in Nigeria. One map was created in 1903 and is a visualization of the settlements on the Jos Plateau; one map is a visualization of Nigeria with a focus on Jos Plateau; one map is entitled "The Fulani Jihad and those Settlements on the Jos Plateau Affected by the Emirates and/or their Allies" and displays the attack strategy of Jemaa, Zaria, Ningi, and Bauchi groups. The notebook contains colour pencil crayon drawings of styles of dress in Assakio Village with descriptive titles.
Item is a folder of typed research documents and interviews compiled by James H. Morrison in Assakio Village in Nigeria in 1976. The interview transcriptions are listed in a table of contents. The interviews are a range of individuals containing the chief of the Assakio council, tradespeople, various ceremonies and community events. The item also contains a vocabulary and greeting list, and index.
File consists of two notebooks James H. Morrison completed on behalf of a colleague researching the Assakio village in Nigeria in 1976. The notebooks feature oral history notes based on interpreter facilitated conversations, observations, interviews, and vocabulary list.
Subseries contains five notebooks and textual records of field work that James H. Morrison completed on behalf of a colleague researching the Assakio village in Nigeria in 1976.