Search

Reset

Searching in Bangladesh, India, Nigeria

Showing 1-10 of 32 results

Pages

  • Document

    Our voices are strong: Lessons from women’s, girls’ and trans people’s self-led organisations

    Mama Cash, 2017
    Based on interviews with fifteen of Mama Cash’s grantee-partners, the new report Our Voices Are Strong shows that the power of women, girls and trans people at the helm of self-led organisations lies in their use of direct, personal experience to push for greater inclusion and justice in their communities.
  • Document

    Where energy is women's business: national and regional reports from Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Pacific

    ENERGIA: International Network on Gender & Sustainable Energy, 2007
    In the introduction to this publication, ENERGIA policy advisor and editor of this pubication Gail Karlsson writes, “In many developing countries, especially in the poorest areas, most energy currently comes from traditional biomass fuels such as wood, charcoal and agricultural wastes - and collection and managing these fuels is strictly ‘women’s business’.” She calls on national energy and dev
  • Document

    Gender, ICTs and Agriculture

    International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (World Conservation Union), 2002
    This report examines the digital divide that exists between developing nations of Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific and the rest of the world. The report highlights the following issues:
  • Document

    Policies for low carbon growth

    Overseas Development Institute, 2009
    The paper presents a review of low carbon growth policies in two high-income (UK and Germany), five middle-income (China, India, Mexico, Guyana and Nigeria) and two low-income countries (Bangladesh and Ethiopia).
  • Document

    Clinical social franchising: an annual compendium of programs, 2009

    University of California, Los Angeles, 2009
    Social franchising represents one of the best known ways to rapidly scale up clinical health interventions in developing countries. Building upon existing expertise in poor and isolated communities, social franchising organisations engage private medical practitioners to add new services to the range of services they already offer.
  • Document

    Innovative Pro-Poor Healthcare Financing and Delivery Models

    Results for Development Institute, 2009
    In their efforts to improve health systems, developing countries face the challenge of integrating traditional government health resources with a large and growing private health sector, where many poor people seek care.
  • Document

    Strengthening the links between health systems research and policy

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2009
    Translating the results of research on health systems into policies is rarely straightforward, particularly in low and middle-income countries. The research consortium Future Health Systems: Innovations for Equity has undertaken to plan and conduct focused health systems and policy research in some of the largest low-income countries in the world.
  • Document

    Improving provider performance: innovative strategies in Bangladesh, India and Nigeria

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2009
    Poor quality and high costs are associated with the informal provision of health care. This has led to a search for innovative strategies to improve performance. New research on interventions in Bangladesh, India and Nigeria provides learning about different ways to achieve this goal.
  • Document

    Making health markets work for poor people

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2009
    In many countries people use a wide variety of market based providers of health-related goods and services ranging from highly organised and regulated hospitals and specialist doctors to informal health workers and drug sellers operating outside the legal framework. A large share of encounters with health workers and suppliers of pharmaceuticals involves a cash payment.
  • Document

    Voices from the South. The impact of the global financial crisis on developing countries

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2008
    The global financial crisis is already beginning to have an impact on the ‘real economy’ in poorer countries around the world. However, the debate in the west about the impact of the crisis has largely ignored its impact on the developing world, and the voices of people from these countries are rarely heard.

Pages