Zugangsbuch des Museums der ehemaligen Deutschen Kolonialschule ca. 1910 
Inventarliste ab 1976 erstellt im Rahmen der Re-Inventarisierung der Sammlung durch Hanns Bagdahn und Walter Breipohl 
Inventarliste Stand 1982 gegliedert nach Ausstellungsraum
Inventarliste 2020

 

 


 
       
         

 
     
No1921 No 326   No 519 No 322 No 309
   
 
 
No 1722 No 2 No 3 No 374 No 327
     
No 125 No Trommel  No 250 No 212   NO 580
       
No 321 No 251  No 507  NO 297
 No 1952
       
No 213 No 391 No505 No520 No218
       
No 325        

 

 

 

Access book of the museum of the former German Colonial School ca. 1910 

Inventory list 1982 compiled within the framework of the re-inventory of the collection by Hanns Bagdahn and Walter Breipohl  

Inventory list stand 1982 divided by showroom

Inventory 2020

 

 

 

 

1760  2125   103   1893   1894

 

"

   

L 143

 G 5
  2126 2128 2127
         
 2014 2131  1719 1895  73
       
 622  155  431  140 1898
     
  L 144
 514 515  326  326
         
  1921  1958  519  322   3094 
         
  1722    2   3    374   327
     
 125    Trommel   250   212  518
       
  321
 251   507    

 

 

Subcategories

Rangeland-based livestock production is a major land use system that contributes between 15 and 60 percent of the agricultural GDP in eastern and southern African countries. The growth of rangeland vegetation is highly variable in space and time, occurring in temporary patches. 

Knowledge of rangelands is crucial to their management and strategic use of resources. Local communities have developed strategies that are grounded in cultural practices, stories, ethics, and norms specific to their area. These strategies also require access to up-to-date information on heterogenous and seasonal resource availability.

However, site-specific information on the condition and intensity of use of rangeland resources is rarely available or accessible to herders in real-time. Consequently, incomplete or outdated information is often the basis on which pastoralists make decisions. 

Information and communication technologies (ICT) have enormous potential to provide easily accessible up-to-date information to increase efficiency based on spatial data generation, telemetry services, GPS navigation services, and mobile phone network services, reliably facilitated by an ever-growing system of private and public satellites. 

To successfully co-develop technology, InfoRange uses a transdisciplinary approach to create the ICT solutions together with users in a way that embeds them in social innovations. Through  an actor- and activity-oriented approach, we build on the knowledge of different involved actor groups to understand how their decision-making can be improved through ICT.

Linking digital solutions to the existing system offers opportunities for the community to improve their information gathering and sharing and make it more effective. In addition, digitization can facilitate communication between various stakeholders, such as veterinarians, authorities regulating water supply in pasture areas, or government agencies involved in other pastoral services.