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Famine and human rights Full text
1991
De Waal, Alex
Famine is clearly and undeniably a terrible wrong, and famine is preventable. The occurrence of famine is an indictment of the ethics of the country in which it has occurred. Despite this, those claiming to represent ethical concerns in general and human rights in particular have had little impact on either understanding famine or dealing with it. This paper is an attempt to develop an agenda whereby human rights concerns can be brought to bear on the problem of famine.
Show more [+] Less [-]Pastoral development and the use of para-vets in southern Sudan
1991
Almond, M.
Building partnerships between Northern and Southern development NGOs: issues for the 1990s
1991
Fowler, A. (University of Sussex, Falmer, East Sussex (United Kingdom))
Financing primary health care: an NGO perspective
1991
Diskett, P. | Nickson, P. (Department of International Community Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool (United Kingdom))
Relief and rehabilitation work in Mozambique: institutional capacity and NGO executional strategies
1991
Egan, E. (Zambezia Field Office, UNICEF Maputo, c/o UNICEF Geneva, Palais des Nations, 1211 Geneva (Switzerland))
Did the project fail? A community perspective on a participatory primary health care project in Ecuador
1991
Moser, C.O.N. | Sollis, P.J. (Department of Social Administration, London School of Economics, London (United Kingdom))
Development In Practice: An Oxfam Journal.
1991
Pratt B. (ed.)
The impact of food aid on cereal and livestock prices in Red Sea Province, The Sudan: 1980-89
1991
Cole, R. (320 South Magnolia, Lansing, Michigan 48912 (USA))
Calculating food-aid cost-effectiveness: evidence from Ethiopia
1991
Fitzpatrick, J. | Storey, A. (Fitzpatrick Associates, Economic Consultants, 58 Haddington Road, Dublin 4 (Ireland))