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Don’t stop now: how underfunding the Global Fund to fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria impacts on the HIV response
International HIV/AIDS Alliance, 2012In November 2011, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (the Global Fund) announced that its next scheduled funding round was cancelled. This report draws on recently collected field data from numerous countries where the International HIV/AIDS Alliance operates to explain why AIDS funding crisis requires urgent action.DocumentClimate change vulnerability and adaptation preparedness in Southern Africa
Heinrich Boell Foundation, 2010This report evaluate the state of preparedness for climate change adaptation in southern Africa. It is aimed at supporting the demands of state and non-state southern African actors for climate change adaptation finance and the efficient administration of such funds.DocumentMitigation and National and Sub-National Response to Climate Change Institutional Architecture in Southern Africa:the case of Zimbabwe.
The Global Industrial and Social Progress Research Institute, 2011Despite the existence of the Environment Management Act of 2002, Zimbabwe neither has a climate change policy, climate change strategy nor national adaptation strategy. Instead, there is an array of uncoordinated programmes and activities, and pieces of legislation on climate change.DocumentGender, ICTs and Agriculture
International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (World Conservation Union), 2002This report examines the digital divide that exists between developing nations of Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific and the rest of the world. The report highlights the following issues:DocumentAn exploratory study of the social contexts, practices and risks of men who sell sex in southern and eastern Africa
Oxfam, 2011This research presented explored the social contexts, life experiences, vulnerabilities and sexual risks experienced by men who sell sex in Southern and Eastern Africa, with a focus on five countries; Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe.DocumentSADC Gender Protocol 2011 Barometer
Gender Links, Johannesburg, 2011The 2008 Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) Protocol on Gender and Development was a groundbreaking agreement among the region’s leaders. This report is the third in a series produced by the Southern Gender Protocol Alliance – a network of national and regional NGOs in SADC countries campaigning for the implementation of the Protocol.Document“I expect to be abused and I have fear”: sex workers’ experiences of human rights violations and barriers to accessing healthcare in four African countries
African Sex Worker Alliance, 2011This report documents human rights violations experienced by female, male and transgender sex workers in four African countries (Kenya, Uganda, South Africa and Zimbabwe), and describes barriers they face to accessing health services.DocumentICTs in support of human rights, democracy and good governance
International Telecommunication Union, 2002This paper analyses human rights and governance issues as they pertain to ICTs for the WSIS forum, with a focus on the role of those who protect human rights and foster good governance. The paper is a part of the Strategy and Policy Unit’s (SPU) background papers in preparation for the upcoming World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in 2003.DocumentFertility in African communities affected by HIV
Knowledge Services, IDS, 2011This "Studies of HIV in African communities 'Highlights'", which was produced by IDS Knowledge Services with partners in the ALPHA Network, includes findings and recommendations around the topic of fertility in African communities affected by HIV. This publication is based on the research which came out of the ALPHA Network's seventh workshop on 'HIV & Fertility: an examinationDocumentRural Africa at the crossroads: livelihoods, practices and policies
Overseas Development Institute [ES], 2000The last two decades of the 20th century have been a period of change for sub-Saharan African economies. Structural Adjustment Programmes have triggered a huge, unplanned income diversification response in African rural areas making rural populations become more occupationally flexible, spatially mobile and increasingly dependent on non-agricultural income-generating activities.Pages
