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No. 1 Hit Band Neon Trees Under Attack For Tobacco Sponsorship
Why Are Good Charlotte, The Cranberries and Happy Mondays Shilling For Big Tobacco?
USAID Continues Funding for HIV-Criminalization in Africa
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Making Haiti Safe for Women Through the Light of a Lamp
Ruth Messinger is part of Change.org's Changemakers network, comprised of leading voices for social change. Five months after the earthquake, security in Haiti's refugee camps remains dire. In some camps, gangs and opportunists have hijacked the...
Published
Thu, Jun 24 2010 6:06 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Zimbabwe's Inclusive Government Forgot to Include Women
A coalition of local human rights NGOs in Zimbabwe, together with the International Center for Transitional Justice, recently put out a fascinating report that surveyed women on a range of issues. The entire report is a must-read, but notable to me were...
Published
Wed, Jun 23 2010 2:56 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Fight to Stop Domestic Violence Goes Global
For one cleric in Jordan who gravely instructs his audience, a "light beating" should be enough. No striking women — or donkeys or camels, for that matter — in the face. But he says that light beatings in places where bruises won't show...
Published
Wed, Jun 23 2010 1:31 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Food Crisis in Niger: 2005 and Today
Crop failure and increasing food prices are spelling crisis in Niger — putting over 7 million people at risk of famine. Wait. Are we experiencing d éjà vu here? In 2005, headlines about Niger read virtually the same thing. Five years ago, drought-induced...
Published
Wed, Jun 23 2010 7:28 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
What the Crisis in Kyrgyzstan Should Tell the World
When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton commemorated World Refugee Day last week , she noticeably failed to reference one violent refugee crisis that’s been unfolding now for weeks. Central Asia hasn't seen a refugee crisis like the one that's...
Published
Tue, Jun 22 2010 2:59 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Link Between Diamonds and Tuberculosis
Among all the predictors of tuberculosis epidemics out there, the presence of gold, diamonds and precious minerals in the soil doesn't rank high on that list. Poor sanitation, check. High levels of AIDS infections? Check. But precious minerals? What...
Published
Tue, Jun 22 2010 10:56 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Should Governments Forcibly Test People for HIV?
It's not nearly as outrageous as forcing HIV-positive women to become sterilized. But these days, there's another invasive practice that's attracting serious controversy: mandatory HIV testing. While the debate over mandatory testing isn't...
Published
Tue, Jun 22 2010 7:44 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Teaching Haitian Tent Cities With Soap Operas
Normal 0 0 1 282 1608 13 3 1974 11.1280 0 0 0 For a lot of parents in the U.S., the idea of leaving your children to watch soap operas smacks of bad parenting. But for people in Haiti's tent cities, it might not be such a bad idea. A new project financed...
Published
Mon, Jun 21 2010 12:56 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
In Pursuit of Less Lethal Floods
If the 1980s were marked by bouffant hairstyles, shoulder pads and power ballads, the 2080s might be an era of massive flooding. According to a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), by that point, some 20% of the world's...
Published
Mon, Jun 21 2010 10:14 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Hidden Costs of Skin Lightening Products
If it's beautiful to be white, as so many marketers will tell you, it can also be extremely dangerous, too. Throughout much of the developing world and the U.S., beauty salons and corner markets offer products like Skinlite and Vite-Fée ("fast...
Published
Mon, Jun 21 2010 5:47 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
How to Deal with Corruption Allegations: Zambia Edition
Here's a real-life quandary straight out of Ranil's post on aid accountability: following evidence of fraud within Zambia's ministry of health, millions in aid grants to the country have been suspended . After all, how can donors be expected...
Published
Fri, Jun 18 2010 3:09 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
For the 12 Million Roma, Europe is the Third World
The order to leave came unexpectedly, with residents given only 20 minutes to abandon their homes and much of their belongings. “They came with trucks and police cars,” one of the victims from the informal Gazela Bridge settlement in Belgrade, Serbia...
Published
Fri, Jun 18 2010 12:55 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
In Praise of Rwanda's "Public Option"
If Rwanda's high economic growth rate, political stability and focus on women's rights have not yet convinced you that the country is beacon of hope in Africa, perhaps this will: the government of Rwanda currently offers health insurance to 92...
Published
Fri, Jun 18 2010 10:13 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Will Trade Guns For Job? Turning AK-47s into Ploughshares
I’m spending a lot of time lately thinking about one of the most ubiquitous acronyms in post-conflict Africa: DDR. So few letters, so many expectations. DDR stands for disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (usually). It’s the process by which...
Published
Fri, Jun 18 2010 6:52 AM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
How to Stop the Sahara's Spread ? Build a Great Green Wall
Today in Chad, 11 African leaders collected $119 million dollars — to plant trees. The money, pledged from the Global Environment Facility, is intended to help Saharan countries go green. Literally. The plan, according to the BBC , is to build a "wall"...
Published
Thu, Jun 17 2010 1:42 PM
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Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
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