Photo of: Paul Lane

Dr. Paul Lane

View Title...

Paul's profile was created using:
Sort By:

1-10 of 17 online sources for Paul Lane

  • View Online Source
    riftvalley.dlconsulting.com/?view=courses - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/1/2007    Last Visited: 8/27/2008  

    Other guests included: David Hopcraft, owner of the game ranch where the course was held; Paul Lane, then Director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa; Neil Turner, Regional Coordinator of Save the Children Fund (UK); Paul Murphy of the Sudan Peace Fund (Pact); and Michael Chege, a Rift Valley Institute Fellow and Director of the Center of African Studies at the University of Florida, currently seconded by UNDP to the Kenyan Ministry of Planning.

  • View Online Source
    www.riftvalley.org/?view=courses - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/1/2007    Last Visited: 6/20/2008  

    Other guests included: David Hopcraft, owner of the game ranch where the course was held; Paul Lane, then Director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa; Neil Turner, Regional Coordinator of Save the Children Fund (UK); Paul Murphy of the Sudan Peace Fund (Pact); and Michael Chege, a Rift Valley Institute Fellow and Director of the Center of African Studies at the University of Florida, currently seconded by UNDP to the Kenyan Ministry of Planning.

  • View Online Source
    www.riftvalley.net/courses.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/1/2007    Last Visited: 11/19/2007  

    Other guests included: David Hopcraft, owner of the game ranch where the course was held; Paul Lane, then Director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa; Neil Turner, Regional Coordinator of Save the Children Fund (UK); Paul Murphy of the Sudan Peace Fund (Pact); and Michael Chege, a Rift Valley Institute Fellow and Director of the Center of African Studies at the University of Florida, currently seconded by UNDP to the Kenyan Ministry of Planning.

  • View Online Source
    www.samburu2005.org.uk/thanks.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2005    Last Visited: 5/5/2007  

    Dr Paul Lane - Director, British Institute in Eastern Africa

  • View Online Source
    wwws-a.ucl.ac.uk/news/events - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/10/2005    Last Visited: 3/3/2007  

    A British Academy Symposium organised by Dr Kevin MacDonald, Senior Lecturer in African Archaeology, UCL) and Dr Paul Lane (lately Director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa, currently of the Department of Archaeology, York University)

  • View Online Source
    www.biea.ac.uk/research_pages/supported_projects/rumbek - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 1/10/2008  

    Project Director: Dr Paul Lane (Department of Archaeology, University of York)

  • View Online Source
    British Institute in Eastern Africa - Directors - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/5/2008    Last Visited: 7/5/2008  

    Paul Lane, 1998 - 2006
    ...
    Paul Lane

    Paul Lane joined the Institute shortly after completing a period of teaching Archaeology and Museum Studies at the University of Botswana in Gaborone, and before that at the University of Dar es Salaam.At both institutions he was instrumental in helping establish and consolidate degree programmes in Archaeology.

    His main research interests encompass the historical and maritime archaeology of eastern and southern Africa, and the transition to farming in these same regions.While Director of the Institute, he carried out his own research on the transition from hunting and gathering to farming in northern Nyanza Province, Kenya and on the historical archaeology of Luo settlement in the same area.

  • View Online Source
    Dr Daniel Brockington - IDPM staff (School of... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/11/2006    Last Visited: 3/27/2008  

    It was organised with Paul Lane of the British Institute of East Africa, William Beinart of St Anthony's College, University of Oxford and Michael Sheridan of Vermont University.

  • View Online Source
    GMOs: What Is Kenya's Stand? - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/22/2001    Last Visited: 5/14/2007  

    The implications of the commercialisation of genetically-modified seeds, according to Paul Lane, director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa, means that small-scale farmers or communities will be perpetually hooked to the terminator technology products.

  • View Online Source
    GMOs: What Is Kenya's Stand? - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/11/2001    Last Visited: 8/5/2002  

    The implications of the commercialisation of genetically-modified seeds, according to Paul Lane, director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa, means that small-scale farmers or communities will be perpetually hooked to the terminator technology products.As a result, agricultural production will fall.

    But, possibly, the greatest concern is the safety of biotechnology products.Opponents fear that the transgenic plants and livestock or the genetically modified organisms (GMOs) as they are commonly known, may not be safe for consumers or the environment.

Page:  1 2 Next

Wrong Person?

Try these instead
More...
For Recruiters For Sales Pros

Copyright © 2008 Zoom Information Inc. All rights reserved.

BBeachHead-Oct08_RC001_P020.1 OM13