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Searching with a thematic focus on HIV and AIDS, HIV and AIDS treatment and care
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Briefing 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.DocumentGlobal Fund update
International Council of AIDS Services Organsiations, 2002This Update has been prepared to keep NGOs and civil society abreast of the latest developments with respect to the Fund.DocumentNGO participation in the Global Fund: a review paper
International HIV/AIDS Alliance, 2002This paper summarises a review undertaken by the International HIV/AIDS Alliance in August and September 2002, assessing the participation of HIV non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in 6 country level processes of the Global Fund for 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.DocumentScaling up the response to infectious diseases: a way out of poverty
World Health Organization, 2002The report calls for a major increase in the international response to the three major killers: HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria. It begins by profiling these diseases, in terms of their spread, the relationship between the diseases and the reason why the poor are particularly vulnerable to them.The authors argue that the tools to address these diseases are available, but inequitably distributed.DocumentThe impact of HIV/AIDS on Southern Africa’s children: poverty of planning and planning of poverty
Southern African Regional Poverty Network, 2002This paper takes an approach to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Southern Africa region based on a 'high road' and a 'low road' response to HIV/AIDS by Save The Children UK. His main argument is based on the fact that in the absence of good planning, the toll of HIV/AIDS on the Southern Africa Development Community will result in considerable poverty and misery.DocumentThe potential costs and benefits of responding to the mobility aspect of the HIV epidemic in South East Asia: a conceptual framework
HIV and Development in Asia and the Pacific, UNDP, 2002It is projected that there will be an increasing volume of population movement within and between countries South East Asia.DocumentPreventing HIV infection, promoting reproductive health: UNFPA Response 2002
United Nations Population Fund, 2002This document provides information on the strategy and actions of the United Nations Population Fund over the past year.Sections of the report focus on the fund's strategy, its country and regional programmes and its work in global arenas such as UNGASS and UNAIDS.The document concludes with signs of progress, citing the increase in coverage of programmes and political commitment to addressiDocumentHIV/AIDS and poverty reduction strategies. a policy note
HIV and Development Programme, UNDP, 2002The Policy Note provides a synthesis of current thinking on the interface between poverty reduction strategies and efforts to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS.Pages
