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Your search for '"system of rice intensification"' returned 5125 results (Page 180/512)
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How sand, soda cans, and salt can help communities in Puerto Rico quench their thirst—safely—when disaster strikes.
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Politics of Poverty
Can you track the Ebola funding from pledge to delivery?
For aid transparency information to be useful, we need not just information on funding, but also needs to include information about where the funds are used and what they intend to deliver.
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As Congress held hearings on repairing the electric grid in Puerto Rico, local activists and advocates urged action for sensible, resilient, diverse systems.
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Politics of Poverty
Peru's fight for millions in tax revenue from Cerro Verde mine
New research from Oxfam’s partners in Peru shows – yet again – how hard it can be for governments to protect the tax base over the life of a mining project (and hold mining companies accountable).
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Politics of Poverty
Aid data: Time to get crunching!
A compilation of data sets related to global development...for the geek in all of us.
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Politics of Poverty
White Supremacy keeps White people ignorant and complicit: A Juneteenth reflection
People of all backgrounds in this country–perhaps especially the living descendants of enslaved people–have the complicated burden of holding two truths at once: the US can be a beacon for democracy, equality, and opportunity, but it is also the site of deep injustice that has yet to be fully rectified or healed.
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Politics of Poverty
Can we rewrite the rules for a new economic era? Signs point to yes–but it’s up to us
If the so-called “free” market is proving untenable, what’s next? Many are homing in on the idea of a Human Rights Economy, which would restore economic rights to the realm of human rights, and value people as more than just workers and consumers.
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The world is highly unequal. So what are global wealth inequality and income inequality? Explore these key terms and more.
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Politics of Poverty
How did we get to “hot strike summer” anyway?
Writers. Actors. Hotel workers. And soon, most likely, Teamsters. It’s the summer of strikes, when hundreds of thousands of unionized workers are flexing their muscle of collective action. Why is this erupting with flash and heat in such a brutal summer?
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Politics of Poverty
Oxfam Sisters on the Planet Lead the way this World Food Day
The UN created World Food Day in 1945. This year, we pledge to work with our Sisters on the Planet Ambassadors to continue the work to address the many underlying causes of global hunger.