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Saturday, January 28, 2012   21:04 GMT    
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THEMATIC SOCIAL FORUM
Working Towards a Never-Ending Democracy
By Antonio Martins
PORTO ALEGRE - For five centuries, Europe has taken it upon itself to enlighten the world, teaching it ways to address and overcome crises, from ideas and wars to missionary work and genocides.
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INDIA
Male Activists Enhance Pre and Postnatal Care
By Manipadma Jena
BHUBANESHWAR, India - The primitive Juang tribe in remote Nola village on Chandragiri hill experienced its first three institutional childbirths only a month ago.
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DEVELOPMENT
Uniting Against Extreme Poverty
By A.D.McKenzie
PARIS - When Louisamène Joseph Alionat unexpectedly began singing in a packed hall at the United Nations cultural agency here this week, it was an attempt to give encouragement to her peers engaged in the uphill battle of trying to end extreme poverty.
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HEALTH-SOUTH AFRICA
HIV-Related Deaths Slow Economy
By Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN - If there was no HIV/AIDS, South Africa would have 4.4 million more people than today, the size of a major city. This significant slow-down in population growth is causing a slow down in economic growth and resulting in social ills, researchers warn.
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ZIMBABWE
To Yuan or Not to Yuan, That is the Question
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - From downtown shops that stock cheap clothing and shoes that fall apart after one wear, to mining concessions in platinum, gold and diamonds - the Chinese finger is now in virtually every Zimbabwean pie.
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CAMEROON
Anglophones Feel Like a Subjugated People
By Ngala Killian Chimtom
YAOUNDE - When Cameroon’s President Paul Biya announced that the 50th anniversary of the reunification of French and British Cameroon will take place later this year, it resurrected bitter feelings among Anglophone Cameroonians who say they do not feel like equal partners with their Francophone counterparts.
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LEBANON
Could a New Civil Law Unify a Divided Society?
By Mona Alami
BEIRUT - Odette Klysinska, a Catholic French native, sits in her living room in an affluent neighbourhood in Beirut, clutching her will in one hand, shocked to learn that it is no longer legally valid in the country she now calls home.
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JAMAICA
"Mama P" Faces Prejudice, Economic Challenges
Analysis by Zadie Neufville
KINGSTON - Running on promises of job creation, economic growth and wider stakeholder consultations, Jamaica's most popular politician and the country's first female prime minister Portia Simpson Miller swept to power in a victory almost no one had predicted.
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SRI LANKA
Poorest Still Go Hungry
By Amantha Perera
COLOMBO - Experts agree that Sri Lanka's free pre and postnatal clinics across the island nation have helped bring infant mortality down to 15 per 1,000 live births and the under-five mortality rate to 21 per 1,000 live births.
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MALAWI
Street Vendors Lose Customers after Stripping Women Naked
By Claire Ngozo
LILONGWE - A campaign to stop people buying merchandise from street vendors is gaining momentum in Malawi’s main cities of Lilongwe, Blantyre and Mzuzu after the small-scale traders went on a rampage undressing women and girls wearing trousers, leggings, shorts and mini-skirts.
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AFRICA
Miracle Tree is Like a Supermarket
By Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN - When a food crisis hits the continent, African countries tend to look to the international donor community to mobilise aid. But a fast-growing, drought- resistant tree with extremely nutritious leaves could help poor, arid nations to fight food insecurity and malnutrition on their own.
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KENYA
Four Years On, IDPs Remain in Camps
By Peter Kahare
RIFT VALLEY, Kenya - Six-year-old Victor Muruga points to a hole in the bush that he calls his "bedroom". "I sleep there, under that tree and my mother sleeps under that blanket," says Muruga.
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PUERTO RICO
Cleaner Energy Sources Prove Divisive
By Carmelo Ruiz-Marrero*
SAN JUAN - As Puerto Rico seeks to lower soaring utility rates while simultaneously shifting toward cleaner energy sources, it faces grassroots opposition to two major projects even though at least one is 100-percent renewable.
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA
Informal Economy Ensures Equitable Development
By Catherine Wilson
PORT MORESBY - Although Papua New Guinea is known as a resource-rich country, 85 percent of the population depends on the informal economy for a living.
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Britain Boosts Economic Ties with the Caribbean
By Peter Richards
ST GEORGE'S, Grenada - As China sees its influence continue to grow in this part of the world, a delegation from the United Kingdom arrived in Grenada last weekend with a proverbial carrot for its former colonies, vowing to create new opportunities for trade, investment and innovation "in our respective economies".
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JAPAN
Tsunami Brings Sea Change to Tohoku
By Suvendrini Kakuchi
MINAMI-SANRIKU, Japan - Yumi Goto, 60, lives with her husband in a temporary shelter on a windy hill that overlooks vast stretches of tsunami-devastated seacoast where her home was once located.
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INDIA
Advancing Economy Reveals a Hungry Underbelly
By K.S. Harikrishnan
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, India - Even a year after Rani, a three-year-old tribal girl in the backward Wayanad district of southern Kerala state, was treated in a government hospital for gastroenteritis she remains grossly underweight and suffers from frequent bouts of diarrhoea.
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MAURITIUS
The Decline of Consumer Cooperatives
By Nasseem Ackbarally
PORT-LOUIS - Amateurism, high prices, mismanagement, and a limited product range have discouraged Inderjeet Rajcoomarsingh, the former chairman of the Mauritius Agricultural Cooperative Federation, from shopping at cooperative stores.
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The Green Economy, Boon or Menace?
By Emilio Godoy*
MEXICO CITY - The development of the green economy is the subject of pitched debate among specialists. While some believe it will deepen social inequalities and increase corporate control over natural and biological resources, others highlight its potential role in protecting the environment and creating employment.
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Development News in RSSLarge parts of the world's population suffer from poverty; inequality remains high. Current development orthodoxy is focused on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), committing the international community to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger, achieve universal primary education, promote gender equality, empower women, reduce child mortality, improve maternal health, combat diseases such as HIV/Aids, ensure environmental sustainability and develop a global partnership for development.
IPS brings you exciting stories of communities and peoples dealing with development challenges around the world.

Farming the Future
Money Laundering - Crime, Tax Evasion, Bribes and the Financial System
UNITED NATIONS: Inside the Glass House
Towards Doha - Better Financing for Development
Agriculture
Feeding the Future
IBSA
Download PDF File Communications for Sustainable Development Award
Sustainable Development
The Neglected Goal - A Toilet Revolution
The Creeping Desert
IFIs - International Financial Institutions
Subsidies
Kyoto on the Horizon
 G8
News in RSS
PORTUGAL: Going Underground in Hard Times
PAKISTAN: New Rehab Plan Brings Hope for War-Disabled
ICELAND: Recovering Dubiously From the Crash
THEMATIC SOCIAL FORUM: Working Towards a Never-Ending Democracy
GUATEMALA: Ríos Montt to Stand Trial for Genocide
INDIA: Male Activists Enhance Pre and Postnatal Care
DEVELOPMENT: Uniting Against Extreme Poverty
HEALTH-SOUTH AFRICA: HIV-Related Deaths Slow Economy
Falklands/Malvinas, From Rhetoric to Pressure
MIDEAST: Censorship Changes Colours
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Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
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