Sign in
NetworkOfCare.org
August 2010 - Global Health
Blog Help
Global Health
Home
Syndication
RSS for Posts
Atom
RSS for Comments
Recent Posts
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
Why HIV Criminalization Laws Do Not Work
New EU-India Trade Agreement Threatens Generic HIV/AIDS Medicine Supply
Archives
July 2011 (1)
June 2011 (1)
May 2011 (1)
April 2011 (1)
March 2011 (1)
January 2011 (1)
December 2010 (2)
November 2010 (4)
October 2010 (3)
September 2010 (45)
August 2010 (70)
July 2010 (61)
June 2010 (71)
May 2010 (72)
April 2010 (82)
March 2010 (77)
February 2010 (67)
January 2010 (45)
December 2009 (11)
November 2009 (18)
October 2009 (26)
September 2009 (11)
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Viewed
|
Most Commented
Full Bellies Don't Equal Healthy Bodies
When it comes to diet, are children in rural Africa actually be better off than those living in the Western world? That's one of the findings of a new study focused on the bacteria found in the bellies of young children, published by Italian scientists...
Published
Thu, Aug 05 2010 1:22 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Empowering Women to Lead Africa's Agricultural Research
Stop in Anytown, Africa and the important role women play in agriculture is obvious — they're the ones running the village farms. But travel into Africa's cities, and step inside its laboratories — the ones conducting research on agricultural...
Published
Thu, Aug 05 2010 6:30 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
In Kenya, MTV Tries to Make Fighting HIV Cool
The story has all the requisite staples: sultry women, city lights, emotional backstabbing. But MTV's Shuga is more than that. For its target audience in Kenya, it's also a compelling meditation on HIV/AIDS. We've written before here about...
Published
Wed, Aug 04 2010 1:54 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Muslim Reality TV Show for New Leaders to Go Global
Looking for the next young Muslim leader who can change the world for the better? Look no further, or at least there's now a breakthrough way to find and foster them. Because the leading Islamic reality TV show in Malaysia, which sets out to discover...
Published
Wed, Aug 04 2010 11:00 AM
by
Change.org's Human Rights Blog
Why No One in Africa Wants to Farm Anymore
There’s growing concern in Africa and around the world about food security. The population continues to grow, European birth rates be damned; climate change is wreaking havoc with agriculture; and some post-war countries like Sierra Leone and Liberia...
Published
Wed, Aug 04 2010 6:56 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
It's Time For President Obama To Deliver Results for Veterans
Paul Rieckhoff is part of Change.org's Changemakers network, comprised of leading voices for social change. He is the Founder and Executive Director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, and the author of Chasing Ghosts . President Obama’s...
Published
Tue, Aug 03 2010 1:19 PM
by
Change.org's Human Rights Blog
Now Growing in Africa: Ethanol
If a Western oil giant has its way, rural Sierra Leone will soon be the site of some major ethanol production. The possibility is raising an increasingly common set of questions: Is that the right way to use the land? And whose land, anyway? The ethanol...
Published
Tue, Aug 03 2010 12:48 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
African Promises on Maternal and Child Health, Round Two
As a recent report from the Lancet puts it, the number of maternal and child deaths around the world is “unacceptably large.” And yet most maternal and child deaths are preventable. Accordingly last week, when the African Union Summit concluded, African...
Published
Tue, Aug 03 2010 7:34 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
How to Prove You're Post-Conflict? Pick Up Your Trash
Okay, that may be an exaggeration. But it’s the first thing I noticed when I arrived in Freetown last month, two and a half years after my first visit. Back then, trash lined the streets until it was shoved into a pile, and the pile was lit on fire. Voila...
Published
Mon, Aug 02 2010 2:02 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Kampala to Beijing: Global Health's Influential New "Hot Spots"
When we think about the places where policies influencing global health are debated and decided, there are a few usual suspects — cities like New York, Geneva, Washington D.C and London. Not surprisingly, though, and perhaps disappointingly, all...
Published
Mon, Aug 02 2010 6:06 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
< Previous
1
2
3
4
5