“despite many successes, the poorest and most vulnerable people are being left behind.”
* Mobile phone penetration worldwide 2013-2019 | Statistic - 0 views
How Successful Were the Millennium Development Goals? A Final Report | New Security Beat - 0 views
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eport calls for better data collection practices to create a post-2015 development agenda that can overcome the MDG’s shortcomings.
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number of people living in extreme poverty and proportion of undernourished people in developing regions has declined by more than half since 1990,
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Why Ebola is terrifying and dangerous: It preys on family, caregiving, and human bonds. - 0 views
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75 percent of Ebola victims are women, people who do much of the care work throughout Africa and the rest of the world. In short, Ebola parasitizes our humanity.
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Its kill rate: In this particular outbreak, a running tabulation suggests that 54 percent of the infected die, though adjusted numbers suggest that the rate is much higher. Its exponential growth: At this point, the number of people infected is doubling approximately every three weeks, leading some epidemiologists to project between 77,000 and 277,000 cases by the end of 2014. The gruesomeness with which it kills: by hijacking cells and migrating throughout the body to affect all organs, causing victims to bleed profusely. The ease with which it is transmitted: through contact with bodily fluids, including sweat, tears, saliva, blood, urine, semen, etc., including objects that have come in contact with bodily fluids (such as bed sheets, clothing, and needles) and corpses. The threat of mutation: Prominent figures have expressed serious concerns that this disease will go airborne, and there are many other mechanisms through which mutation might make it much more transmissible.
Admit it: we can't measure our ecological footprint | New Scientist - 0 views
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“when humanity exhausted nature’s budget for the year” and began “drawing down local resource stocks and accumulating carbon dioxide in the atmosphere”. This year it was on 20 August, the earliest date yet.
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“so misleading as to preclude their use in any serious science or policy context,” it says in a paper in PLoS Biology.
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The footprint analysis does not really measure our overuse of the planet’s resources at all. If anything, it underestimates it.
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The Most Important Thing, and It's Almost a Secret - The New York Times - 0 views
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The number of extremely poor people (defined as those earning less than $1 or $1.25 a day, depending on who’s counting) rose inexorably until the middle of the 20th century, then roughly stabilized for a few decades. Since the 1990s, the number of poor has plummeted.• In 1990, more than 12 million children died before the age of 5; this toll has since dropped by more than half. • More kids than ever are becoming educated, especially girls. In the 1980s, only half of girls in developing countries completed elementary school; now, 80 percent do.
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Granted, some 16,000 children still die unnecessarily each day. It’s maddening in my travels to watch children dying simply because they were born in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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The world’s best-kept secret is that we live at a historic inflection point when extreme poverty is retreating. United Nations members have just adopted 17 new Global Goals, of which the centerpiece is the elimination of extreme poverty by 2030.
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Deportations under Obama will continue to be high. - 0 views
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Some 2 million people have been deported during Barack Obama’s presidency. In 2012 there were 369,000 illegal immigrants expelled—a ninefold increase from 20 years ago, the Economist points out.
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Congress now authorizes $18 billion to go toward removing people from this country. The budget to carry out all other law enforcement, by contrast, is $14 billion.
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