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Multiple public-private job-holding of health care providers in developing countries: an exploration of theory and evidence
Department for International Development Health Systems Resource Centre, 2004This review examines the systemic and individual causes of multiple jobholding (MJH) and evidence on its prevalence through an analysis of country-level conditions. The paper places MJH in the context of health systems and government policies in low and middle-income countries, including Zambia, Indonesia, Egypt, Bangladesh, India, Poland, Kenya and Mexico.DocumentImplementation of hospital reform policies: lessons of experience
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 2004This London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) paper reviews evidence from hospital reform studies in four countries: UK, Zambia, Indonesia and Columbia. It considers the argument the market forces model of reform increases efficiency through strengthening incentives.DocumentMeasuring health inequality among children in developing countries: does the choice of the indicator of economic status matter?
BioMed Central, 2003This study, published by BioMed Central, compares the impact of four different wealth indices on the measurement of health inequality among children in developing countries. The study uses the World Bank Asset Index and three other indices, all based on household assets, to analyse data from Bolivia, Brazil, Cameroon, Chad, Indonesia, Kenya, Malawi, Pakistan, Tanzania and Uganda.DocumentThe impact of foreign direct investment on poverty reduction: a survey of literature and a temporary finding from Indonesia
Center for Industrial Economic Studies, Faculty of Economics, University of Trisakti, Indonesia, 2004This study focuses on the experience of Indonesia with Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), and all the economic reforms that have been undertaken to attract such investment.DocumentSources of Indonesian economic growth
Global Development Network, 2002The paper traces the evolution of macro-economic policies of Indonesia from independence in 1945 until just after the financial crisis in 2001. Using growth accounting analysis, the paper finds that economic reform aimed at macroeconomic stabilization and trade and investment liberalisation was the main reason for the success of the economy.DocumentGenerating political will for safe motherhood in Indonesia
Social Science and Medicine, 2003If the medical technology is available to prevent maternal deaths in childbirth, why have global maternal mortality levels not declined to any significant degree in the last decade? This paper, published in Social Science & Medicine, presents a case study concerning safe motherhood efforts in Indonesia in the ten years following the 1987 International Conference on Safe Motherhood.DocumentWater justice for all: global and local resistance to the control and commodification of water
Friends of the Earth International, 2003This report explores the issue of global water justice.DocumentThe World Summit on the Information Society: Creating Your Own National Gender Programme - A Practical Guide
Global Youth Action Network - Taking It Global, 2003This guide provides an overview of The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) process and detailed information on how to engage as gender advocates in the WSIS process. It begins by outlining the case for gender equality in the Information Society, and provides some background on UN processes.DocumentReducing maternal mortality: learning from Bolivia, China, Egypt, Honduras, Indonesia, Jamaica, and Zimbabwe
World Bank, 2003This study, produced by the World Bank, reviews case studies of maternal health programmes in Bolivia, China, Egypt, Honduras, Indonesia, Jamaica and Zimbabwe. Research was prompted by the question of whether current programme strategies could reduce maternal mortality more quickly than the decades required in the historically successful countries of Malaysia and Sri Lanka.DocumentPoverty targeting in Indonesia: programs, problems and lessons learned
Centre for Strategic and International Studies, Indonesia, 2004The significant rise in poverty levels in Indonesia following the economic crisis in 1997 led to the implementation of several targeted poverty alleviation programs. How effective were these programs at mitigating the impact of the crisis on the poor? This paper assesses some key poverty alleviation programs, specifically targeted to the poor.Pages
