Full Coverage: Economia
April 2008
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30.04.2008
Millions of volunteers will visit every household in the country in the coming years to gather information on changing demographics, in a census that will reveal how economic growth has affected its people. Indias population is expected to climb to 1.19 billion in 2011 from 1.13 billion in 2008, say officials.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [India] [Development] [Population] [Poverty] [Economy] [Governance] Image: Commuters at a railway station, 2006 / Photo credit: Amit Dave/Files/Reuters
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28.04.2008
Helena Norberg Hodge first visited Ladakh in northern India in 1973 to study its culture and language. Fascinated by its gentle people and their earth-based way of life, she kept returning every year since then. In a freewheeling interview, she discusses how annihilation of the local culture can be stopped.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Economy] [Environment] [Climate change] [Conservation] [Environmental activism] Image: Helena Norberg Hodge / Photo credit: Infochange
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28.04.2008
WASHINGTON, Apr 27 (OneWorld) - Occasionally, OneWorld.net will put out an alert when many of the NGOs we work with are taking on a breaking issue. Over the past year, we've done this for the crisis in Kenya, Cyclone Sidr in Bangladesh, and the earthquake that struck Peru in August. But this week's alert on the growing global food crisis is perhaps the most worrying one we've ever sent.
more...From: OneWorld US Related topics/regions: [Aid] [Food] [Economy] [Globalisation] |
25.04.2008
This week's alert on the growing global food crisis is perhaps the most worrying one we've ever sent, says OneWorld's managing editor in the United States.
more...From: OneWorld US Related topics/regions: [Agriculture] [Aid] [Emergency relief] [Food] [Poverty] [Economy] [Nutrition/malnutrition] [Geopolitics] [Globalisation] Image: Children at a rural Nepal school enjoy a meal as part of the World Food Programme's feeding program. © Naresh Newar / United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
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22.04.2008
WASHINGTON, Apr 22 (OneWorld) - Pennies a day. That's all it would cost the United States to significantly reduce the emission of gases that contribute to global warming. What's more, the cost to businesses, families, and overall economic growth would be minimal, according to a new study released this week.
more...From: OneWorld US Related topics/regions: [United States] [Economy] [Business] [Climate change] [Governance] Image: Carbon pollution from a factory. © Geographical
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22.04.2008
Centre for Science and Environment releases a two year study on the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act as it becomes pan-Indian from April 1. NREGA can regenerate the village economy through productive assets on water conservation and afforestation and just wages for the people, says CSE.
more...Related topics/regions: [India] [South Asia] [Development] [Labour] [Poverty] [Economy] [Conservation] Image: Wages under NREGA need to be standardised © CARE India
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17.04.2008
Bulgaria has received a grant of 300 million euros from the European Union for the development of its information and communication technologies. Although the country has a very high number of mobile and Internet users, there is still a scope for more ICT penetration in small towns and rural areas.
more...Related topics/regions: [Capacity building] [Economy] [Communication] [ICT] Image: Krassimir Simonsky, Deputy Chairperson of the State Agency of Information Technologies and Systems / Photo credit: Tsvetelina Nikolaeva
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14.04.2008
SAN FRANCISCO, Apr 14 (OneWorld) - Long-time critics of corporate-friendly free trade agreements are applauding House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) for effectively putting the brakes on a deal with the South American nation of Colombia.
more...From: OneWorld US Related topics/regions: [United States] [Colombia] [Labour] [Economy] [Trade] [Geopolitics] Image: Colombian farmers stood to lose a lot from the trade deal, said anti-poverty groups. Image © Lutheran World Relief
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14.04.2008
The rise in food prices, the [Indian] government says, is an international phenomenon. But this argument is unlikely to cut much ice with the people. At the crux of the crisis is the tardy pace at which farm output has been growing in recent years, says senior journalist Paranjoy Guha Thakurta.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Agriculture] [Food] [Poverty] [Economy] Image: Paranjoy Guha Thakurta / Photo credit: BBC
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04.04.2008
The use of mobile phone communication for various services is rapidly growing in developing countries. The innovative use of mobile phones in the Philippines: lessons for Africa, a report published by Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency identifies the best practices and lessons learnt from the Philippines experience.
more...Related topics/regions: [ICT] [Knowledge] [Economy] [Communication] |
03.04.2008
Assuming normal weather conditions, the Food and Agriculture Organization predicts a 1.8 percent increase in world rice production, including India and Bangladesh, which may ease the current tight supply in key rice producing countries. On the other side, international rice trade is expected to fall due to restrictions in exports.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Agriculture] [Food] [Poverty] [Economy] [Trade] Image: Haitian rice farmer
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