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mhlengixaba

Future Trade Possibilities in the Congo - Document - Nineteenth Century Collections Online - 3 views

  • https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/MATINM876423464/NCCO?u=rau_itw&sid=bookmark-NCCO&xid=7411aafa
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    ivory has been traded for hundreds of years by people in Africa and Asia, resulting in restrictions and bans.. it is driven by transnational organized crime syndicates. they devastate elephant populations and undermine the rule of law, destabilize governments, and promote corruption.
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    not a pre-1890 source
mhlengixaba

https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/179483.pdf?refreqid=excelsior%3Ad10298db155bc88e859646... - 2 views

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    ivory trade has been valued since ancient times in art or manufacturing for making a range of items from ivory carvings. Hard ivory generally comes from elephants in the western half of Africa, soft ivory from those in the eastern half. A hard ivory tusk is darker in colour and is more slender and straighter in form than a soft tusk. Traders transported ivory from eastern along the Saharan trade routes to the North African. in the 19th century that the great development of the East African ivory trade took place. An increased demand for ivory in America and Europe coincided with the opening up of East Africa by Arab traders and European explores, and this led to the intensive exploitation of the ivory resources of the interior
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    not annotated
mhlengixaba

19326-f0994c344b9f362b8bd58af0b06e1fa9.jpg (300×300) - 2 views

shared by mhlengixaba on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    The image of trade with ivory
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    broken link/ takes me to a not found page
mhlengixaba

Behind the Legal, Domestic Ivory Trade, a Black Market Flourishes | African Wildlife Fo... - 1 views

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    Ivory has been desired since antiquity because its relative softness made it easy to carve into intricate decorative items for the very wealthy. For the past one hundred years, the ivory trade in Africa has been closely regulated, yet the trade continues to thrive. e need for human porters meant that the growing trade of ivory and enslaved people went hand-in-hand, particularly in East and Central Africa. In those regions, African and Arab traders of enslaved people traveled inland from the coast, purchased or hunted down large numbers of captives and ivory, and then forced the enslaved people to carry the ivory as they marched down to the coast. Once they reached the coast, the traders sold both the enslaved people and ivory for hefty profits.
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    not a historical source
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