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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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A Way to Solve Haiti's Food and Energy Problems at Once
In describing the problems Haiti continues to face in the wake of the devastating January earthquake, it's hard to know where to start. But two of the key ones that immediately come to mind are 1). food security and the 2). country's rampant record...
Published
Tue, Jul 06 2010 2:57 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
An Ambulance That's a Bicycle
Locals call the contraption a Zambulance, or a Zambike. It's not much — just a mattress-outfitted trailer strapped onto a bicycle. But in a part of Zambia where a four-hour walk separates most villages from the nearest hospital, the hope is...
Published
Tue, Jul 06 2010 12:51 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Developing World's Top 10 Ethical Destinations
As a world traveler and adventure-seeker, I'm always looking for the next hot spot. But as a student of global development and poverty, I've grown wary of many travel opportunities — especially in the Third World. It seems like the chances I'll...
Published
Tue, Jul 06 2010 5:57 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Why the UN Shouldn't Envy the World Cup
I've never been the biggest soccer fan. In general, I find watching a whole 90+ minutes of ball-kicking tedious, especially when the game comes down to just one or two goals. Even so, I can't help getting riled up for the World Cup every four...
Published
Mon, Jul 05 2010 7:39 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
When Should You Tell a Child They Have HIV?
A parent with a child with HIV faces a terrible conundrum. On the one hand, it’s important to let a kid be a kid — no parent wants their child to constantly worry about his or her own mortality. On the other hand, if parents don't tell their...
Published
Sat, Jul 03 2010 6:52 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
In Mali, Using Cell Phones to Create Patient Records
Imagine that you're a mother in Mali, named Mme Magassa. When you go to visit a health clinic, you need to arrive with a big, pulpy pile of paperwork. These are your child’s clinical records, which you've shepherded through five different homes...
Published
Fri, Jul 02 2010 10:33 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Condoms That Fight Rape, With Teeth
When Sonnet Ehlers was a 20-year-old medical researcher, she was called to help a rape victim. "She looked at me and said, ‘If only I had teeth down there,'" Ehlers tells Kenya's Nation newspaper. And Ehlers thought, Good idea . Forty...
Published
Fri, Jul 02 2010 7:52 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
A U.S. Image Consultant For Equatorial Guinea's Dictator?
Guess who's gone and hired an image consultant ? None other than Equatorial Guinea’s resident dictator, Teodoro Obiang Nguema. Apparently, his reputation as one of the worst dictators in Africa hurts his feelings. It's not enough that he's...
Published
Fri, Jul 02 2010 4:30 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Why Does the U.K. Want to Send Children Back to Afghanistan?
The United Kingdom is getting ready to return child asylum seekers back to Afghanistan. Yes, you read that right. The country’s Border Agency is planning to set up a “reintegration center” in Kabul to which it plans to send unaccompanied minors that are...
Published
Thu, Jul 01 2010 1:21 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
A Chance in Liberia at World Cup Cash
Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has promised $1,000 and her vuvuzela to "any Liberian" who correctly predicts the teams in the World Cup final. Her press secretary Cyril Badio says it's her personal money — no "misuse of public...
Published
Thu, Jul 01 2010 11:12 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Want to Help Uganda? Send Condoms
Uganda's got a condom shortage, and in a country with a high HIV infection rate, that's not just a corner store inconvenience. That's a public health crisis waiting to be recognized. "If all men were to use condoms," says Ugandan...
Published
Thu, Jul 01 2010 4:40 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Girlup.org: Uniting Girls to Change the World
We've all heard touching stories of young American children who cnoduct penny drives or donate their allowances when they learn about the hardships faced by kids their age in developing countries. But now there's a new way for young children —...
Published
Wed, Jun 30 2010 1:46 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
3 Things Washington Needs to Remember in Haiti
The following is a guest post contributed by Timi Gerson, Director of Advocacy for American Jewish World Service. Last week, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee released a report on the state of play regarding relief and reconstruction efforts in Haiti...
Published
Wed, Jun 30 2010 10:10 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Previewing the September Millennium Development Goals Summit
Was this past weekend's G8 Summit a preview of September's major UN Summit on the Millennium Development Goals? If so, there's reason for deep concern. The flagship program to emerge from the recent G8 Summit in Toronto was the " Muskoka...
Published
Wed, Jun 30 2010 6:50 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
In India, One Law Helps the Poor Fight Bureaucracy
India the democracy is an inspiration. India the bureaucracy, though, is another matter. Though India's 1.2 billion-people strong participatory system is awe-inducing, on a day-to-day level, the country's dense layers of bureaucracy can be stultifying...
Published
Tue, Jun 29 2010 1:46 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
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