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  <title>Oxfam America</title>
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            These are the search results for the query, showing results 11 to 14.
        
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    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/empty-promises">        <title>Empty promises</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/empty-promises</link>        <description>What happened to 'development' in the WTO's Doha Round?</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>The Doha Development Round was meant to rebalance decades of unfair rules in agriculture and address the needs of developing countries. Instead, the negotiations have betrayed this promise. The trade Round has become a market access negotiation, in which developing countries are expected to give disproportionately more and will receive little but stale promises of the general benefits of liberalization. The economic crisis presents an imperative, and an opportunity, for real reform.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>World Trade Organization</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>foreign policy</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>politics and government</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>trade</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-07-20T17:24:45Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Briefing Paper</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-fall-2008">        <title>OXFAMExchange Fall 2008</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-fall-2008</link>        <description>A root revolution in Cambodia</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Because 40 percent of the people on our planet live in poverty and Oxfam is working to change that, it's our job to highlight issues that are often overlooked in US politics. In this issue of <em>OXFAMExchange</em>, we've included some information at the end of each article to help you think about how the lives of people around the world are affected by our political choices here. Oxfam is nonpartisan: we ask all the candidates to take concrete steps toward finding lasting solutions to poverty and social injustice. The incoming administration will assume responsibility for a country in crisis—fighting two wars and an economic recession. These are undeniably difficult times. It is all too easy to feel that real change is nothing more than a pipe dream. When cynicism or doubt gets the better of us, we must all remember: Oxfam has always and will always invest most heavily in people's efforts to transform their own communities. The people featured in this issue leave no doubt that determination and innovation can create change—with or without strong federal leadership. And these successes are what keep us all going—these and your shared commitment to the possibility of a world without poverty and injustice.</p>
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]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Asia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Cambodia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>United States</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>affordable housing</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-06-15T18:27:53Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Exchange</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/foraging-and-fainting-coping-with-drought-in-ethiopia">        <title>Foraging and fainting: coping with drought in Ethiopia</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/foraging-and-fainting-coping-with-drought-in-ethiopia</link>        <description>With nothing to eat, families wait for help.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>A drought that has gripped parts of Ethiopia has left 4.6 million across the country needing emergency assistance, according to the latest government estimates. And 75,000 children are suffering with severe acute malnutrition.</p>
<p>On a recent Wednesday morning in the West Arsi Zone, a large crowd of people gather outside the government offices in the Shalla district, where, according to government figures, 55,598 people have been identified as needy, but only 10,000—people with the most severe wants—are getting help. In this crisis, distinctions based on need have begun to blur.</p>
<p>"For us, it is becoming even more difficult to tell who is the poorest of the poor," says one man.</p>
<p>The faces of the people in the crowd are gaunt, their clothes are tattered. Suddenly, a low roar swells from their midst. They surge from the compound and out onto the road, surrounding a pair of aid workers in a dense, crushing circle. They are desperate to tell their stories, desperate for help.</p>
<p>A middle-aged man shouts out that local officials promised two weeks ago to support the people with wheat, oil, and corn, but so far he has received nothing. Instead, the crowd's vigil, now in its fourth day, is met only with this admonition: wait.</p>
<p>An elderly man adds that one of those in the crowd on the road couldn't wait anymore and died there the day before.</p>
<p>Others say they have been filling their stomachs with a leafy weed that has sprung up since the rains came. But the greens—boiled in water and salted—have made some of their children sick with diarrhea.</p>
<p>Weak from lack of real food and their stomachs filled with forage, the children of one mother sometimes faint on their way to school.</p>
<p>"Can you help me?" she asks, staring at the aid workers.</p>
<h3>Lines at a feeding center</h3>
<p>A short distance away, mothers rest on a long line of benches under the shade of a giant tree at the Shalla health center. Small children, unnaturally still, sit on their laps, their cries occasionally piercing the din. This is a feeding center where some of the weakest children come for a week's supply of  Plumpy Nut—a nutrient-packed food supplement for malnourished children.</p>
<p>Not all hungry children qualify for the supplement. Some are deemed still well enough not to require it. One of them is the 11-month-old son of a single mother. He is her only child, and desperate to have him get more food, she offers to give him away to an aid worker—a gesture of hopelessness other mothers make, too.</p>
<p>A five-year-old girl holds the hand of her father as she limps slowly toward the packets of Plumpy Nut a worker is counting out for her. She has recently spent 15 days in a hospital in Shashemene because of severe malnutrition, and is now strong enough to rejoin her family. But her mother is sick following the delivery of a new baby, and the two-and-a-half acres of seeds her father just planted for the next harvest have all been washed away by a sudden heavy rain.</p>
<p>"We are facing so many disasters at the same time," says the leader of a local community, where he notes that one man died the day before and many of the women are sinking into exhaustion. "Drought, flood, disease."</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Coco McCabe</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>natural disaster</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-05-28T18:59:42Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfam-in-the-horn-of-africa">        <title>Oxfam in the Horn of Africa</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfam-in-the-horn-of-africa</link>        <description>Drought. Conflict. Low crop prices. These are among the realities that poor people across the Horn of Africa face on a daily basis. But with new tools for channeling water, building peace, and influencing markets, people are beginning to wrest control over their lives.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Ethiopia is a country of contrasts—from the cool, wet highlands of the coffee farmers to the scorched pastures of the lowland herders. The challenges here and throughout the Horn remain enormous. Conflict plagues Sudan to the west and Somalia to the east. And widespread poverty traps people in lives of hardship. Since 2000, Oxfam America has been helping local communities survive conflict and marshal their natural resources in ways that strengthen families, villages, and whole regions.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Oxfam America</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>human rights</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Sudan</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livelihood</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Somalia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>peace and security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livestock</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Darfur</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>internally displaced persons</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>coffee</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>disaster risk reduction</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-06-09T20:42:44Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Brochure</dc:type>    </item>



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