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Searching with a thematic focus on HIV and AIDS
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HIV/AIDS a resource for journalists
Journ-AIDS, 2002This 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/AIDSundersDocumentLosing paradise?: HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Washington, 2002This 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.DocumentGraphic design for AIDS
Design for the World, 2002This document addresses the specific issue of graphic design as it currently applies to HIV/AIDS communication. It is aimed primarily at designers.DocumentThe next wave of HIV/AIDS: Nigeria, Ethiopia, Russia, India, and China
National Intelligence Council, USA, 2002This 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.DocumentCutting edge pack: gender and HIV/AIDS
BRIDGE, 2002HIV/AIDS acts as a spotlight, exposing inequalities, including gender inequality, globally.DocumentThe impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on the education sector in Sub-Saharan Africa
The African Symposium, 2002This 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.DocumentPoverty, AIDS and children’s schooling: a targeting dilemma
World Bank, 2002This 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 differentiDocumentFighting HIV/AIDS with peanuts: a year in the life of the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria
Christian Aid, 2002The 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’.DocumentBriefing position paper on the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM)
Save the Children Fund, 2002Addressing 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.DocumentThe Global Fund: which countries owe how much?
Aidspan, 2002The 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
