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Owning the loan: poor countries and the MDGs
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development, 2004This report, commissioned by Christian Aid and AFRODAD, investigates the links between debt management, the build-up of new loans, and the most sustainable ways of financing the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Malawi, Mozambique, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia, all low-income and highly indebted countries.Key points of the paper include:together, these countries face an estimated miDocumentMapping of sector wide approaches in health
HLSP Institute, UK, 2003The purpose of this report commissioned for SIDA is to give an up to date picture of the status of Sector Wide Approaches (SWAps) in the health sector in the following countries: Ghana, Tanzania, Mozambique, Senegal, Bangladesh, Zambia, Mali, Uganda, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, and Malawi.DocumentResponses by faith-based organizations to orphans and vulnerable children: preliminary study of six countries in Africa
United Nations Children's Fund, 2003This study, published by UNICEF and the World Conference of Religions for Peace, draws attention to the roles of faith-based responses to HIV/AIDS in the six African countries it surveyed (Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland and Uganda).DocumentLiving with variable climate in southern Africa
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2004Southern Africa has experienced severe food shortages over the past few years. These have been caused by several factors, including climate change and variability, problems with governance (including poor risk-management, and inadequate early warning systems) and wider structural issues (such as globalisation).DocumentLearning the lessons on PSIA: a synthesis of experience from the DFID Pilot Studies
PRSP Monitoring and Synthesis Project, 2003Poverty and Social Impact Analysis (PSIA) aims to improve policy formation in low-income countries and is hailed as a key element both of national PRS processes, and in the design of IMF and World Bank lending programmes. PSIA is an approach for assessing the effects of policy change on the well being of different groups in society.DocumentGender and reproductive rights: rights-based approach: country pilot projects
World Health Organization, 2001The World Health Organization Making Pregnancy Safer initiative aims to bring human rights principles into maternal and perinatal mortality reduction activities on a national scale.DocumentPilfering for survival: how health workers use access to drugs as a coping strategy
Human Resources for Health, 2004This Human Resources for Health paper reports on a study which investigated pilfering of drugs by health staff in Mozambique and Cape Verde. The study was based on a self-administered questionnaire, given to a sample group of health workers. Results confirmed the misuse of access to drugs as a key element in the coping strategies of health personnel to deal with difficult living conditions.DocumentEducation for all: teacher demand and supply in Africa
Education International, 2003Achievement of the Education for All (EFA) goal of universal primary education by 2015 requires that the education system can attract, educate and retain sufficient numbers of well qualified teachers. This working paper examines the place of teachers in the primary education systems of Botswana, Mozambique, Uganda, Tanzania (Mainland), Zambia and Zimbabwe.DocumentReview of Nordic monitoring of the World Bank and IMF support to the PRSP process
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2003This report details the first joint Nordic monitoring of the World Bank and IMF support to the PRSP process in seven countries: Bolivia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam and Zambia.DocumentCorporate responsibility and women’s employment: the cashew nut case
International Institute for Environment and Development, 2004In response to the usual emphasis on 'win-win' situations in the CSR agenda, this paper examines the case of cashew production in Mozambique and India. It illustrates the danger of a 'race to the bottom' when companies operating in liberalising sectors face few, if any, incentives for good social and environmental practice.Pages
