I do not argue that the concept of pastoral nomadism has outlived its usefulness as far as the Middle East is concerned. |
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Nomadism Pastoral nomadism is a way of life based on the marginal areas between agricultural settlements and the deserts and mountains. |
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Pastoral nomadism probably originated when people with herds were driven from the fertile valleys of civilization. |
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Some groups of Sami practice reindeer nomadism and range across northern Sweden and Finland. |
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As I travelled with the nomads and researched about them I found that nomadism was more than just being on the move. |
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Now kibitkas are hardly to be found in this area, although traditional forms of agriculture and nomadism are still in existence. |
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Yet it is not a matter of choosing sides between models of nomadism and sedentariness. |
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Historically, its people engaged predominantly in animal husbandry, especially transhumant nomadism with herds of sheep, cattle, and goats. |
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In the past, children of Kazaks who practiced nomadism lived in boarding schools in small towns during the school year. |
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Settling down, the Uzbeks traded their nomadism for urban living and agriculture. |
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In the early 19th century it was widely believed that mankind evolved from hunting and gathering through a stage of pastoral nomadism to sedentary agriculture. |
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The vast majority are sedentary but in some Western countries nomadism is still practised, fully or partially. |
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These five modes of life are nomadism, agriculture, trade, industry and digital. |
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Dear friends, a few years ago, people were predicting the end of nations and the intellectuals talked of the advent of nomadism. |
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He was thus the first admitted polygamist, and the father of the founders of nomadism, the musical arts, and metalworking. |
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Innu nomadism is based on the cycle of the seasons, fall, winter and spring, summer. |
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It shows a society that is blatantly discriminatory against Travellers and their culture, and particularly of that part of their culture that relates to nomadism. |
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Beyond the diversity of the proposed initiatives, there is also the question of nomadism as a genre. |
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Although hunting and gathering generally imposes a degree of nomadism on a people, it may range from daily movements, as among some Kalahari San, to monthly, quarterly, or semiannual shifts of habitat. |
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I recently wanted to get closer to the notion of nomadism in art. |
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The Somali people have a proud history of nomadism, but drought and food shortages have forced millions off the land they once shared with their prized camels and endless skies. |
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Their farming way of life was very different from the pastoral nomadism of the Mongols and the Khitans on the steppes. |
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The discovery of other environments and other interpretations of Nature through nomadism, trade and even war has inspired civilizations to re-examine and transform their own environment and their perception of the world. |
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Roma experience settlement in Eastern Europe and enforced nomadism in the West, in places varying from squats to shanty towns in unacceptable living conditions. |
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The fifteen tracks on Bazar savant resume Lo'Jo's musical nomadism to date, shifting from Saint-Petersburg to Vancouver, via San Francisco and Timbuktu. |
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It is legitimate for a society to require the beneficiaries of the healthcare system to use it responsibly, to fight medical nomadism and redundant medical tests. |
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In fact, what now counts in many sectors is mobility, continual reassessment and nomadism, whereas IBM was made for long-term, carefully thought-out decisions. |
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Europe has plenty of marginalised social groups, often with traditions of nomadism and their own languages: Irish Tinkers, for example, who speak Shelta. |
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Chatwin in Mr. Patterson's sharp and critical reading, saw sedentariness as spiritual death and self-sufficient, untrammeled nomadism as happiness. |
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