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Searching with a thematic focus on Governance, HIV and AIDS, HIV and AIDS treatment and care
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Fighting 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.DocumentFalse hope or new start?: the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, TB, and Malaria
Oxfam, 2002The Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria was set up in the context of high and increasing infection rates and what this Oxfam policy paper sees as a lack of response from governments. The health status of poor people is deteriorating in many parts of the world, and the Fund is a unique opportunity to mobilise international political will and resources to address this crisis in a new way.DocumentDecentralising of health policy and planning using Participatory Rural Appraisal : Indian example
Global Development Network, 2001This paper focuses on the importance of decentralisation in health care provision and how community participation could become a way forward to provide health care to all, using participatory rural appraisal.The paper outlines the present system of health care in India and the current challenges it faces.DocumentPoverty and human development: UNDP Human Development Report 1997 (highlights)
Human Development Report Office, UNDP, 1999DocumentAIDS and Human Rights: International guidelines, Second International Consultation on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights
Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, 1999http://www.unaids.org/html/pub/publications/irc-pub02/jc520-humanrights_en_pdf.pdfDocumentThe Geographic Scope of EC Aid: One or Several Development Policies?
European Centre for Development Policy Management, 1997This paper describes the origins of the EC development cooperation and its general characteristics.DocumentCase Study of the Women's Health Care Foundation, Quezon City, Philippines
Family Health International, 1997The Women's Health Care Foundation seeks to expand women's health care services "beyond the womb." Established in 1980, the Foundation works to meet the diverse health needs of Philippine women throughout their life cycle, broadening services beyond the traditional maternal-child health programs to include services for adolescents and postmenopausal women; counseling on sexually transmitted diseaDocumentSetting Government Priorities in Preventing HIV/AIDS
Finance and Development, IMF, 1998Public policy has proved to be an effective weapon in containing the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Governments can have the greatest impact by providing incentives for those most likely to spread HIV to adopt safer behavior.Pages
