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Searching in Indonesia

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  • Document

    A study of policies and programs for street children and education in Indonesia

    United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, 2005
    This paper examines street children’s education in Indonesia.
  • Document

    Corporate governance: observance of standards and codes

    World Bank, 2006
    As part of the Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC) programme by the World Bank and IMF, this internet resource brings together country by country implementation assessments. The goal of the ROSC initiative is to identify weaknesses that may contribute to a country’s economic and financial vulnerability.
  • Document

    Measuring food security using respondents’ perception of food consumption adequacy

    Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2005
    This document compares information on self-perceived food consumption adequacy from the subjective modules of household surveys with standard quantitative indicators, namely:calorie; consumption; dietary diversity; and measurement (anthropometry).Datasets from four countries are analysed: Albania, Madagascar, Nepal and Indonesia.
  • Document

    CDM country guides

    Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Japan, 2006
    Many developing countries are faced with a lack of consolidated information on the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), and this information has never been put together before in a comprehensive form.
  • Document

    Time to tackle corruption in education

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006
    In some developing countries massive amounts of funds transferred from ministries of education to schools are leaked. Bribes and payoffs in teacher recruitment and promotion and selling of exam papers can bring the teaching profession into disrepute. Illegal payments for school entrance and other hidden costs help explain low enrolment and high drop-out rates.
  • Document

    Predicting consumption poverty using non-consumption indicators: experiments using Indonesian data

    SMERU Research Institute, Indonesia, 2006
    The most widely used data for measuring welfare or poverty is household consumption expenditure, especially in developing countries where household income data is considered more difficult to collect and less accurate. This method is not, however, without its own problems.
  • Document

    Child domestic labour in South-East and East Asia: emerging good practices to combat it

    International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour, 2006
    This report explores the recent situation of child domestic labour in the South-East and East Asia and the actions that are being taken to combat it in the region.Part I of the report provides an overview of child domestic labour in the region, based on existing publications and documentation.
  • Document

    Urban street children empowerment and support: final program report

    Save the Children Fund, 2006
    This report provides a review of the accomplishments of the Urban Street Children Empowerment and Support (USCES) programme in Indonesia, run by Save the Children. It also provides lessons learned.The first section of the document provides background into the history of street children programmes in Indonesia.
  • Document

    Fighting illegal activities in Asian forests

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006
    Logging is only one of many illegal activities in South-East Asia’s forests. There are further activities that should be considered illegal because they create human insecurity and threaten sustainable forest management. The complexity of these activities, which always involve poor people, poses a challenge to effective preventative policies.
  • Document

    Stronger land rights improve forest management in Indonesia

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006
    Indonesia’s remaining forests face many threats: illegal logging, fires and conflict over land rights and ownership of ‘common’ forest land. Local people have seen the national government give rights to use forest to large industries, who often exploit these resources illegally.

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