Geography; Nature and climate; Demography; History; Wars;
Culture ; Art; Film; Music; Politics; Political parties ; Defense;
Peace movements; Religion; Social conditions ; Education ,
Economics and Arms trade.
Géographie; Nature et climat; Démographie;
Guerres; Histoire; Culture ; La musique; Politique; Partis
politiques ; La défense; Mouvements de paix; Religion;
Conditions sociales ; Éducation; Économie et commerce
des armes
Geography: Uganda lies
astride the equator in the eastern region of Africa and is located
on the raised part of the African plateau. Uganda is a landlocked
country in East Africa and borders Kenya to the east, Sudan to the
north, Tanzania to the south, the Democratic Republic of Congo to
the west and Rwanda in the south-west.
Shaka, Jack (2013). "Migingo Island: Kenyan or Ugandan
Territory?" Journal of Conflictology. Vol. 4, Iss. 2, pp. 32-35.
Campus for Peace, UOC.
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http://www.uoc.edu/ojs/index.php/journal-of-conflictology/article/view/vol4iss2-shaka/vol4iss2-shaka-en
Geografihistoriske primærkilder og fremstillinger /
Geography Historical primary sources and
presentations /
Géographie des sources historiques primaires:
The Uganda Protectorate: Attempt to Give Some
Description of the Physical Geography, Botany, Zoology,
Anthropology, Languages and History of the Territories under
British Protection in East Central Africa. / : Sir Henry Hamilton
Johnston. - New York: Dodd, Mead, 1904.
- http://www.wdl.org/en/item/2561/
'This two-volume work by Sir Henry Hamilton (Harry) Johnston, a
British explorer, writer, and colonial official who spent much of
his career in Africa, is an encyclopedic compilation of information
about Uganda, which became a British protectorate in 1894. Johnston
was asked by the crown, in 1899, to spend two years in Uganda as a
special commissioner, in order to establish civilian administration
after a period of disastrous military rule. He concluded an
agreement with the ruling chiefs of Buganda that helped bring
stability to the country. During his term in office, Johnston
continued his literary and scientific pursuits and spent eight
months traveling to gather the information in these volumes.'