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The BBC Sends More Glamour Girls to Report on Poverty
It's getting very, very weird over there in the BBC's production studios. First, the U.K. broadcaster sends Lindsay Lohan (of Hollywood glam-girl fame) to investigate child trafficking in India. Now, the BBC has decided to fly Chantelle, Ellie...
Published
Tue, May 11 2010 3:13 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Time to Recommit to Foreign Aid Funding
Ruth Messinger is part of Change.org's Changemaker network, a network comprised of leading voices for social change. "America, Thank You So Much" sings the Stigmaless Band, a group composed of HIV-positive Ugandan teenagers taking drugs...
Published
Wed, May 12 2010 6:26 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
3 New Directions for U.S. Global Health Strategy
Last week, Foreign Policy magazine got hold of a White House strategy document for U.S. global development, including global health. The document has gotten lots of attention in global development circles, mainly because of the juicy implications it holds...
Published
Wed, May 12 2010 7:21 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Senate is Ready to Ban Land Mines — Is Obama?
Savor this moment, please: on Friday, a whopping group of 68 U.S. Senators partook in the political equivalent of a kumbaya. After more than a decade of heel-dragging and harrumphing over the U.S. right to use what weapons it pleases, the Senate looks...
Published
Wed, May 12 2010 1:04 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
First World Problems, Third World Solutions
It's a smart, even snarky, reversal of conventional wisdom. For years, advocates in the West have been urging politicians to "do something" about "insert-developing-world-problem-here." Now, if the Design for the First World competition...
Published
Thu, May 13 2010 6:46 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
FIFA Takes on World Cup, Poverty All at Once
On Monday, I published a piece on the contradictions that arise out of the fact that South Africa is hosting of the 2010 World Cup — namely, the contrast between the glitz of the competition and the extreme poverty of much of the host continent. One thoughtful...
Published
Thu, May 13 2010 9:54 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Wiring Africa's Internet Deserts
Would you pay $4,000 a month for a home internet connection? Marc Andreessen does . That amount, the Bay Area-based Netscape creator says, affords him an unbelievably zippy 100mpbs line. Which at $4,000, you'd expect. But what sort of speed would...
Published
Thu, May 13 2010 11:22 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
A Tale of Two UNICEF Leaders
This month, Anthony Lake became UNICEF's executive director. He's the agency's sixth such figure, joining the agency — like his predecessor Ann Veneman — after an impressive career in the U.S. government. In fact, in many ways...
Published
Thu, May 13 2010 12:34 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The World's Future Megacities
By 2050, it's estimated that nearly seven out of 10 people in the world will be living in a New York City, a Tokyo, a Beijing or a New Dehli. Or any one of dozens of as-yet nameless megacities currently sprouting up around the world. The United Nations...
Published
Thu, May 13 2010 4:22 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
For Many Children, Not Working Isn't an Option
Want to know the latest good news about child labor? According to the International Labor Organization, child labor actually declined by 10% among kids aged 5-14 between 2005 to 2008. And wait, it gets better. Even among child laborers, the number engaged...
Published
Fri, May 14 2010 6:26 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Where the Fight Against Malaria is Being Won
Anyone who's ever felt disheartened about the fight against malaria — the fact that a child dies in Africa every 45 seconds from the disease, to take just one statistic — would do well to turn their sights towards Rwanda. As recently as five years...
Published
Fri, May 14 2010 9:14 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
How Poor Are These Kids? It's All in the Lens
You don't need to read a research paper on NGO Appropriation of Images of Poverty (A Hermeneutic Analysis) to know what developing world poverty looks like. Or at least how NGOs in the field want you to perceive it. We've all seen the photos:...
Published
Fri, May 14 2010 1:03 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
The Earthquake Shouldn't Stop Haiti's Elections
“Should there be an election?” In the wake of Haiti's Jan. 12 quake that killed 270,000 people, millions of Haitians are wondering. But a better question might be: “Can Haiti afford not to have one?" Elections were scheduled for Feb. 28 this...
Published
Fri, May 14 2010 3:16 PM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Is Globalization Killing Democracy?
It's not as far-fetched as it sounds, at least according to a new study. German political scientist Nils Steiner says globalization hurts voter participation. Not in a, "Well, it's only a mid-term election, and it's the last Grey's...
Published
Sat, May 15 2010 7:58 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
Development vs. Environment: A Tough Choice in Guyana
It's a choice every developing country needs to make at some point or another. Do we push ahead toward development as Western nations did before us, with no regard for our environmental surroundings? Or do we take development slower, moving at an...
Published
Mon, May 17 2010 6:59 AM
by
Change.org's Global Poverty Blog
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