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Your search for '"system of rice intensification"' returned 5233 results (Page 49/523)
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Politics of Poverty
Tax billionaires like the rest of us
Billionaires don’t pay their fair share in taxes. There is no justification for it. We must tax them now to invest in our families and a green economy.
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Politics of Poverty
The high price of lowballing local organizations
In the push to “localize” humanitarian aid, most funders are ignoring the obvious.
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Politics of Poverty
Mapping out the lie of “pro-life”
The anti-choice movement labeled itself “pro-life” decades ago and rode that train all the way to the Supreme Court. As states furiously roll back rights to abortion and reproductive choice, we can see, with terrifying clarity, how that term is really a shield; and the policymakers who hide behind it often implement policies that disempower and harm people.
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Politics of Poverty
Corporate transparency: The need of the hour
In the past year, we've seen a vicious backlash against “ESG” (environmental, social, and corporate governance measures meant to hold companies to account). Now, in the wake of midterm elections that left us with a divided Congress, the agency charged with ensuring corporate transparency faces fierce political headwinds.
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Politics of Poverty
Remaining Steadfast in an Era of Destabilization
More than one year into the second Trump administration, Oxfam America President and CEO Abby Maxman writes about the destabilization of its foreign and domestic policy, and what we can do to avoid getting distracted from our mission.
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The United Nations adopted a new indicator to track progress against one of the Sustainable Development Goals. For the first time
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Publication
Dangerous Delay 2: The Cost of Inaction
One person is likely dying of hunger every 48 seconds in drought-ravaged Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia, according to estimates by Oxfam and Save the Children in a report published today, “Dangerous Delay 2: The Cost of Inaction,” highlighting the world’s repeated failure to stave off preventable disasters.
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Publication
Women and the big business of chocolate
Chocolate is a $100 billion industry, but most cocoa farmers live on less than $2 a day. Among them, women in particular are more likely to face poverty, low wages, and discrimination.
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Publication
The Making of a Seoul Development Connection
When the G20 meets in Seoul in November 2010, it has a big choice to make. It can either retreat into a narrow focus on its own interests, or it can prove it is capable of genuine global leadership in the face of the interlinked economic, food, and climate change crises.
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Publication
Sowing seeds of self-reliance in Ethiopia
With an initial investment from Oxfam, community-owned grain banks allow Ethiopians to feed the World Food Programme.