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Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Dadush & Nielson |
Governing Global Trade The multilateral system that has underpinned world trade for over 50 years is facing serious challenges. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Mauro & Yafeh |
Financial Crises of the Future Will future financial crises resemble the contagious crises of the 1990s, or the country-specific crises of the 1890s? What seems clear is that both advanced and emerging market countries will pay close attention to this debate. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 David E. Bloom |
Governing Global Health How better coordination can advance global health and improve value for money. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 |
Is the Global Health System Broken Three points of view on how the global health system can be improved: Making Markets Work by Joe Cerrell... Finding a Unified Vision by Helen Gayle and J. Stephen Morrison... Targeting the Health MDGs by Tore Godal... |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Bio-Tchane & Yehoue |
Africa's Missing Ingredients How international economic aid can be better directed to entrench development in sub-Saharan Africa. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Arvind Subramanian |
Harnessing Ideas to Idealism A profile of Michael Kremer, the Gates Professor of Developing Societies at Harvard University, whose economic ideas are motivated by idealism and then pursued with intense commitment. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Stefano Curto |
Changing Aid Landscape Despite donors' commitments to scale up aid in line with the 2002 Monterrey Consensus and the 2005 Gleneagles Declaration, the response has been mixed. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2007 Simon Johnson |
The (Food) Price of Success Higher global demand for calories brings inflationary pressure and more. |
Wired November 27, 2007 Scott Carney |
Inside India's Underground Trade in Human Remains The need to study human bones in medicine is well established. The need to obtain the informed consent of people whose bones are studied is not. The reemergence of India's international bone trade reflects the tension between these requirements. |
Wired November 27, 2007 Richard Morgan |
Today, Countries Battle for a Piece of the Arctic. Tomorrow? The Moon. What has gone unnoticed amid the international clamor between Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia, and the US is that the Arctic battle has implications that reach far beyond the top of Earth. The squabbling will be a prelude to -- and even set the tone for -- eventual sovereignty claims on the moon. |
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