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Why Are Good Charlotte, The Cranberries and Happy Mondays Shilling For Big Tobacco?
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Six Months Later, Recovery in Quake-Devastated Haiti Falters
As Bill Gates touches down in Haiti to commemorate the six-month anniversary of the country's devastating quake, it's hard to avoid evidence of how disappointing the overall relief effort has been. Even as Haiti's president hands out medals...
Published
Tue, Jul 13 2010 8:13 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
A Better Path For Haiti's Recovery
Ruth Messinger is part of Change.org's Changemakers network, comprised of leading voices for social change. It appears that Haiti's "15 minutes of fame" are up. With few exceptions, the journalists who flooded the zone following the...
Published
Tue, Jul 13 2010 6:15 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
A New Spotlight on Global Health's Unsung Heroes
It's a common set-up — every x seconds, y children die of <insert disease here> — but a new ad campaign by Save the Children inverts the message. The nonprofit knows that you know too many children are regularly felled by preventable diseases...
Published
Mon, Jul 12 2010 3:37 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Solar-Powered Light Bulb Shines in the Developing World
In parts of the world where electricity is a). too expensive b). non-existent or c). always being cut off by power rationing, candles and kerosene light the way for everyday tasks such as cooking, schoolwork and cleaning. For those of us accustomed to...
Published
Mon, Jul 12 2010 12:42 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Renewed Hope For an AIDS Vaccine
Have you heard the good news on HIV/AIDS? Last week, researchers announced that they've identified antibodies that kill more than 90% of all strains of the AIDS virus. It may be the best news in HIV prevention and treatment research since effective...
Published
Mon, Jul 12 2010 7:29 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Resuming the Fight Against Child Slavery in Haiti
Normal 0 0 1 457 2607 21 5 3201 11.1280 0 0 0 When Ambassador Luis CdeBaca toured Haiti last Wednesday , he had only one goal. President Obama’s appointee on human trafficking hoped to prevent human exploitation from becoming yet one more challenge for...
Published
Sat, Jul 10 2010 7:48 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Keeping Health Workers in Rural Communities
The case of the developing world's missing health care workers can be explained in many ways — some more contested (for e.g., brain drain) and complex than others. Now, the World Health Organization is trying to boil down such phenomena to help governments...
Published
Fri, Jul 09 2010 3:21 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Millions of Hungry Families Are Not a "Market Opportunity"
This is a guest post from Josh Berkman, Associate Director of Media and Marketing at American Jewish World Service. There's been a lot of buzz lately about "business minded do-gooders," as Forbes editor Kerry Dolan describes them in a review...
Published
Fri, Jul 09 2010 12:09 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
In China, Ideas of Mental Illness Move Beyond Class Struggle
During the 1960s and 1970s, to be schizophrenic or afflicted with any other mental illness in China meant you were someone who didn't fully comprehend Mao Zedong's little red book. That was the diagnosis people were given, anyway — and the remedy...
Published
Fri, Jul 09 2010 8:18 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Making the East African Common Market More Than Just a Pipe Dream
Last week, members of the East African Community (EAC) — Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda — announced the launch of an idea that looks good on paper: the creation of a common market. The goal of the new agreement is to allow unrestricted...
Published
Thu, Jul 08 2010 3:47 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Donors Falter on Education Promises in Africa
It's often said, Never break a promise to a child. Presumably, when we're talking about 32 million children, the adage still holds true. But as the UN agency charged with promoting universal education warns , when it comes to past promises of...
Published
Thu, Jul 08 2010 10:23 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Developing Africa's Best Apps, From the Bottom Up
Last week, Apps 4 Africa joined the growing ranks of online competitions geared at finding digital solutions to the world’s real-life problems. But this contest doesn't exactly fall into the traditional mold. What’s unusual about the contest is not...
Published
Thu, Jul 08 2010 7:08 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Meet the New Face of the Fight for Equality: UN Women
On Friday, July 2, a historic event happened at the United Nations: the General Assembly voted unanimously to establish the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, to be known more casually as UN Women . This is quite notable for a...
Published
Wed, Jul 07 2010 2:15 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Case of Naomi Campbell's Blood Diamond
You'd think getting called to testify about whether a man on trial for war crimes once gifted you a mammoth 'blood diamond' might cloud anyone's holiday. If so, supermodel Naomi Campbell gave no indication this past weekend — she spent...
Published
Wed, Jul 07 2010 9:05 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Interview with AIC: The Fight to Educate India's Orphaned Street Kids
When Slumdog Millionaire burst on to the scene, bringing the plight of street children in India to the big screen, Liz Sholtys was no stranger to the problem. Liz spent her last two years of high school living in India, and like anyone who has visited...
Published
Wed, Jul 07 2010 6:44 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
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