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Trade preference erosion: expanded assessment of countries at risk of welfare losses
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2005This paper assesses the situation of the preference-reliant countries seen as being most at risk of experiencing negative welfare effects from preference erosion as a consequence of multilateral tariff liberalisation, with a focus on Bangladesh, Madagascar, Morocco, Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.The paper finds that, while most developing regions experienced welfare gains as a consequDocumentCost and cost-effectiveness of community based and health facility based directly observed treatment of tuberculosis in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
BioMed Central, 2005Published in the journal Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation, this article reports on a study which compared the cost and cost effectiveness of health facility based and community based directly observed treatment (DOT) for tuberculosis in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.DocumentAngry Young Men in Camps: Gender, Age and Class Relations among Burundian Refugees in Tanzania
Danish Institute for International Studies, 1999How does life in a refugee camp affect gender, age and class relations? How do relief operations challenge or reinforce hierarchies? Based on a year's fieldwork with Burundian refugees in Lukole Refugee Camp in North Western Tanzania, this paper explores these questions.DocumentTanzania and the Millennium Development Goal
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development, 2005Five years into the MDGs programme, this study assesses the progress which Tanzania has made, particularly regarding the goal of poverty reduction.DocumentDoes general budget support work?: evidence from Tanzania
Overseas Development Institute, 2005Direct financial support to a country’s budget is a long-established form of aid – as old as development assistance itself. But the last five years have witnessed an important development – the rapid growth of budget-support operations informed by a new and distinctive aid philosophy emphasising flexible funding for country led poverty reduction efforts.DocumentWhat is violence?: perspectives from children in Tanzania
World Vision International Resources on Child Rights, 2005This paper captures the main elements of a series of consultations that World Vision Tanzania conducted with 120 children in two zones in which it operates. The children describe their perceptions and experiences of the acts of violence. This is presented through drawings and personal stories.DocumentEnding legalised violence against children: report for the East and Southern Africa regional consultation
Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, 2005This report reviews law and policy in relation to corporal punishment and deliberate humiliation of children in each state in East and Southern Africa.DocumentPost-July 2004 African strategies for bilateral and multilateral trade negotiations
Southern African Regional Poverty Network, 2004This report presents the findings of a workshop aimed at strengthening the capacity of East African trade policymakers and negotiators, as well as other stakeholders in pursuing their objectives in trade negotiations following the July Package agreed to by the WTO General Council (2004). The report offers key recommendations and observation on a number of issues.DocumentFeasibility study for a long-term reforestation project in Eluai village, Monduli District, Tanzania
Eldis Document Store, 2005Without trees, the important symbiotic relationship between the agro-pastoralist Maasai and their environment will be destroyed.DocumentThe risk of sexually transmitted infections in a Tanzanian mining town
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005Mining communities' transient populations can be high risk environments for sexually transmitted infections. Are there particular groups in these communities that are most at risk? If so, how can these groups' sexual behaviour change and how can the population as a whole be protected from infection?Pages
