Search

Reset

Searching with a thematic focus on HIV and AIDS

Showing 2581-2590 of 2879 results

Pages

  • Document

    HIV/AIDS a resource for journalists

    Journ-AIDS, 2002
    This resource book brings together facts and further resources for journalists, primarily in South Africa, covering the HIV/AIDS epidemic.The document consists of:a comprehensive listing of contacts, organisations and websites in South Africa working on HIV/AIDSethical issues for journalists such as confidentiality and sensationalismlanguagethe facts about HIV/AIDSunders
  • Document

    Losing paradise?: HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean

    Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Washington, 2002
    This is a short article discussing the prevalence of and reaction to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Caribbean, which it states is now the second hardest hit region in the world.
  • Document

    Graphic design for AIDS

    Design for the World, 2002
    This document addresses the specific issue of graphic design as it currently applies to HIV/AIDS communication. It is aimed primarily at designers.
  • Document

    The next wave of HIV/AIDS: Nigeria, Ethiopia, Russia, India, and China

    National Intelligence Council, USA, 2002
    This document from the National Intelligence Council (NIC) makes predictions about the course and implications of the HIV/AIDS pandemic over the next eight years. It states that the number of people with HIV/AIDS will grow significantly by the end of the decade. The increase will be driven by the spread of the disease in five populous countries—Nigeria, Ethiopia, Russia, India, and China.
  • Document

    Cutting edge pack: gender and HIV/AIDS

    BRIDGE, 2002
    HIV/AIDS acts as a spotlight, exposing inequalities, including gender inequality, globally.
  • Document

    The impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on the education sector in Sub-Saharan Africa

    The African Symposium, 2002
    This report presents the main findings and recommendations of an international research project, which has focused on assessing the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on primary and secondary schooling in three countries, namely Botswana, Malawi and Uganda.
  • Document

    Poverty, AIDS and children’s schooling: a targeting dilemma

    World Bank, 2002
    This paper analyzes the relationship between orphan status, household wealth, and child school enrollment using data collected in the 1990s from 28 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, with one country in Southeast Asia.The findings point to considerable diversity—so much so that generalizations are not possible:while there are some examples of large differenti
  • Document

    Fighting HIV/AIDS with peanuts: a year in the life of the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria

    Christian Aid, 2002
    The Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria has been feted as a major positive result of 2001’s UN Special Session on HIV/AIDS and G8 summit. Indeed, some policy-makers appear to believe that the existence of the Fund means that the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the developing country health crisis have been ‘dealt with’.
  • Document

    Briefing position paper on the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM)

    Save the Children Fund, 2002
    Addressing health as an investment, rather than a right, prioritises those who are economically productive rather than the elderly, the disabled and the poorer women and children. At the recent G8 meeting the rich governments failed to pledge the $27 billion needed to re-establish basic health care systems in the poorest countries.
  • Document

    The Global Fund: which countries owe how much?

    Aidspan, 2002
    The majority of the world's nations resolved at UNGASS, a major United Nations conference on AIDS, to increase annual expenditure on the AIDS epidemic to $7-10 billion by 2005, with much of this money to be raised and disbursed by a new global fund – now known as the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria.

Pages