Instituto de Estudios sobre Desarrollo y Cooperación Internacional

Nazioarteko Lankidetza eta Garapenari Buruzko Ikasketa Institutua

Hegoa

Hemeroteca

Instituto de Estudios sobre Desarrollo y Cooperación Internacional

Nazioarteko Lankidetza eta Garapenari Buruzko Ikasketa Institutua

Últimas entregas

The European Journal of Development Research

2024, Vol. 36, Nº 1
  • Grower Power for Value Creation in High-Value Horticulture? The Case of Citrus in South Africa Shingie Chisoro, Simon Roberts
  • Including Men in a Female Financial Model: An Analysis of Informal Grassroots Financial Associations Linda Nakato
  • The Historical Origins of Communal Violence in Africa: Common Pool Resources-Driven Trust and Its Contrasting Effects on Violence Hye-Ryoung Jung
  • A Development Lens to Frugal Innovation: Bringing Back Production and Technological Capabilities into the Discourse Sanghamitra Chakravarty, Georgina Mercedes Gómez
  • Chinese Aid Projects and Local Tax Attitudes: Evidence from Africa Abreham Adera
  • The Role of Land Inheritance in Youth Migration and Employment Choices: Evidence from Rural Nigeria Mulubrhan Amare, Hosaena Ghebru,Adebayo Ogunniyi
  • Impact of Public Agricultural Investment on Crops Production, Households’ Welfare, and Employment Generation Opportunities in Togo, West Africa Essossinam Ali, Nimonka Bayale
  • Power Relations in Malawi’s Social Cash Transfer Programme: The Flip Side of Domination Roeland Hemsteede
  • Why is Labor in the SSA LDCs Moving from One Low Productivity Sector to Another? Ngwinui Belinda Azenui
  • The Role of High-Value Agriculture in Capability Expansion: Qualitative Insights into Smallholder Cash Crop Production in Nepal, Laos and Rwanda Marie-Luise Matthys, Patrick Illien, Outhoumphone Sanesathid

Journal of Human Development and Capabilities

2024, Vol. 25, Nº 1
  • Repair in Education Spaces Melanie Walker
  • Measurement Is Not Everything, But It Does Make a Difference S. Subramanian
  • Affiliation as Solidarity: Perspective of Vulnerable Groups Ana Petek, Ana Gavran Miloš & Nebojša Zelič
  • Labour Law, Employees’ Capability for Voice, and Wellbeing: A Framework for Evaluation Cherise Regier
  • Realising Capabilities for Street Young People in Harare, Zimbabwe: A New Approach to Social Protection Witness Chikoko, Lorraine van Blerk, Janine Hunter & Wayne Shand
  • The Capability Approach, Pedagogic Rights and Course Design: Developing Autonomy and Reflection through Student-Led, Individually Created Courses Rowan Murray
  • Using Alienation to Understand the Link Between Work and Capabilities Simantini Mukhopadhyay
  • A Minimal Capabilities-Based Account of Loss and Damage Laura García-Portela
  • Response to the 2023 Human Security Policy Forum Brendan M. Howe
  • How Institutional Economics May Support the Analysis of Individual and Collective Capabilities Irene van Staveren
  • Democratising Participatory Research: Pathways to Social Justice from the South César Osorio Sánchez
  • Measuring the Development Progress of Least Developed Countries: In the Context of World Development Henry H. Bi
  • Future-oriented Codesign Workshops as a Method of Empowering Citizens in Urban Infrastructure Development: A Capabilitarian Analysis Chiara Gasperoni et al.

Le Monde diplomatique

2024, Nº 341
  • Cómo labra el campo la extrema derecha Philippe Baqué
  • La estrategia de China Renaud Lambert
  • ¿Es Moscú el vasallo de Pekín? Arnaud Dubien
  • Grandeza y miseria de la crítica de los medios de comunicación en Alemania Fabian Scheidler
  • Declive de una escuela contestataria Fabian Scheidler
  • Una Ucrania cada vez más homogénea Corentin Léotard
  • Europa, en orden cerrado Pierre Rimbert
  • Sudán: de la transición a la disolución Gérard Prunier
  • El arco de las tensiones africanas se extiende hasta Senegal Anne-Cécile Robert
  • El Daesh vuelve a extender sus tentáculos Jean-Michel Morel
  • Los hutíes desafían a Estados Unidos Tristan Coloma
  • En el fondo del hoyo Serge Quadruppani
  • Cuando la democracia estadounidense organizaba el terrorismo racial Loïc Wacquant
  • El pacto con el diablo de Rezsö Kasztner Sonia Combe
  • ¿Gaza? “No sabría decirle” Serge Halimi
  • Los ‘sabios’ franceses se portan bien Lauréline Fontaine
  • ¿Cómo evitar el autoritarismo climático? Fabienne Barataud, Laurent Husson y Stéphanie Mariette
  • Una justicia al servicio de las multinacionales Meriem Laribi y Vincent Arpoulet
  • Dejarle deshacer al tiempo Nicolas Vieillescazes
  • El legado de los Manouchian Côme Leymarie
  • El silencio árabe Akram Belkaïd

ADVISORY COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS. Advisory Reports

2023, Nº 125
The necessity of global climate justice

Climate change is a global problem that requires a global solution. Achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement is a collective task in which everyone has a role to play. However, the climate transition is taking place in a world characterized by great inequality. The poorest countries, which have contributed the least to the problem, are in many ways the hardest hit by climate change. In addition, they have less access to the resources needed to shape the climate transition and, at the same time, face the challenge of substantially increasing total energy generation to meet development needs. Finally, the transition itself may lead to unfair effects, such as misconducts in the extraction of needed resources.

Disponible [aquí] (https://www.advisorycouncilinternationalaffairs.nl/documents/publications/2023/12/01/the-necessity-of-global-climate-justice)

This lack of international climate justice makes achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement and halting global warming impossible. It also increases inequality, poverty, instability and conflict. For these and other reasons, the AIV emphasizes that it is in the Dutch interest to step up efforts for international climate justice. In this report, the AIV makes concrete recommendations on how the Netherlands can work towards this.

Disponible aquí

Nueva Sociedad. Democracia y política en América Latina

2024, Nº 310
Algo va mal: nuevos desórdenes globales

«¿Por qué nos hemos apresurado tanto en derribar los diques que laboriosamente levantaron nuestros predecesores? ¿Tan seguros estamos de que no se avecinan inundaciones?», se preguntaba en 2010 el pensador británico Tony Judt en un libro balance cuya traducción española fue titulada Algo va mal. Hoy podemos mantener esta constatación –las inundaciones ya están entre nosotros– al examinar varias dimensiones globales del presente, en el contexto de lo que algunos han denominado el «retorno de la geopolítica».


Puedes consultar el índice y leer parte del contenido siguiendo este enlace.

Alternatives Humanitaires / Humanitarian Alternatives

2024, Nº 25
Crises Alimentaires/ Food Crises

Over the past five years, hunger has been on the rise again and the number of food crises is increasing. 828 million people were hungry around the world in 2022 – 46 million more than the previous year. According to the latest Global Report on Food Crises (World Food Programme, 2023), there were 58 food crises worldwide in 2022 and 258 million people were experiencing acute food insecurity, i.e. they were physically and economically unable to access enough safe, nutritious food. Undernutrition, which results in stunted growth, acute malnutrition and multiple deficiencies, is still the cause of almost half the deaths of children under five worldwide. Acute crisis situations aside, 3 billion people do not have access to a healthy diet. The food crisis, once the sad preserve of poor or war-torn countries, is now affecting industrialised countries. For example, 16% of French people say they do not eat their fill (Crédoc, 2023) and 26 million Americans went hungry in 2020 (U.S. Census Bureau).

Del editorial del nº25.


Leer más aquí.

Soberanía Alimentaria, Biodiversidad y Culturas

2024, Nº 49
Cohabitar el mundo

EDITORIAL

  • Cohabitar el mundo

AMASANDO LA REALIDAD

  • Recrear la comunidad del pan. Horacio Machado Aráoz
  • Rehabitar lo rural. De la teoría a la práctica. Amalia Bueno
  • La gobernanza comunitaria ante los nuevos desafíos. Joám Evans Pim
  • La importancia de ser y sentirse pueblos. Begoña Ribera
  • «Debemos volver a mirar hacia las soberanías». Entrevista a Vanesa Freixa. Revista SABC
  • Aterrizar en la Tierra y los cuerpos. Claves ecofeministas para rehabitar la Tierra. Yayo Herrero

DE UN VISTAZO Y MUCHAS ARISTAS

  • Conversatorio: Volver a habitar los cuerpos. Revista SABC

EN PIE DE ESPIGA

  • Las universidades y su papel en la difusión de falsas soluciones. Isabel Vara Sánchez
  • Industria, políticas europeas y colonialismo extractivista. Adriana Espinosa González

VISITAS DE CAMPO

  • «Lo que el monte necesita es gente». Memorias y retos en torno a los comunes. Aurora Santos
  • Verdcamp Fruits, agricultura ecológica a gran escala. Gustavo Duch

PALABRA DE CAMPO

  • Voces como las nuestras. Adrián O. Lozano
  • De manzanas abandonadas y matriarcados. Tereseta
  • Reseña del libro Geografías de la ingravidez de Marc Badal Pijoan. Laia Batalla-Carrera
  • La fuente. Un lugar de encuentro para pobladoras. Se nos va a echar el día a perder. Joan Verdugo Jiménez

ILUSTRACIÓN

  • Ivonne Navarro

Community Development Journal

2024, Vol. 59, Nº 1

EDITORIAL

  • Living our values in research and practice Kirsty Lohman and Ruth Pearce

REFLECTIONS

  • Why focusing on our strengths matters: reflections on leaving a volunteer role I actually liked Kristen Lyons

ARTICLES

  • Reflecting on community development research: how peer researchers influence and shape community action projects Elaine Arnull and Mahuya Kanjilal
  • An evidence cycle framework for community development initiatives Geoffrey R Browne
  • ‘Come as you are’: place attachment to Islamic third spaces in the United States Hassnaa Mohammed
  • Collective impact: lessons from the American democratic tradition Hannah W Stewart-Gambino
  • Overcoming barriers to social inclusion in agricultural intensification: reflections on a transdisciplinary community development project from India and Bangladesh Christian H Roth and others
  • Learning to work in certain ways: bureaucratic literacies and community-based volunteering in the Philippines Chris Millora

EDITOR'S CHOICE

  • The significance of plus-development through sport: the practices and neoliberal politics of attracting participants to corporate sport-for-development Daniel Eisenkraft Klein and Simon Darnell
  • Community reinvestment challenges in the age of gentrification: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as a case study for wide bank lending disparities Daniel Holland and Gregory D Squires
  • Constructive resilience in response to oppression: the strategy of Bahá’ís in Iran Leyla Tavernaro-Haidarian
  • Empowering practices in education-focused coalitions: an examination using fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis Joshua-Paul Miles and others

BOOK REVIEWS

  • Hazard Mitigation Training for Vulnerable Communities: A K.A.P.S. (Knowledge, Attitude, Preparedness, Skills) Chinmayee Mishra
  • Abortion and Democracy: Contentious Body Politics in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay Amanda-Rose O’Halloran

CORRIGENDA

  • Corrigendum to: Decolonizing social services through community development: an Anishinaabe experience Mamaweswen Niigaaniin and others

Ecología Política. Cuadernos de Debate Internacional

2024, Nº 66
Crisis ecológica y pérdida de biodiversidad

Este número de Ecología Política pone el foco en la pérdida de biodiversidad, abordando muchas de sus ramificaciones. «Crisis ecológica y pérdida de biodiversidad» analiza desde cómo incorporar a las comunidades indígenas y el mundo rural en la expansión de áreas protegidas, hasta la amenaza de la bioingeniería, pasando por la denuncia de los mecanismos de compensación y un sistema agroalimentario responsable de la mayoría de la pérdida de biodiversidad global.

OPINIÓN

  • La negligente desatención a la crisis de biodiversidad Fernando Valladares
  • Transformaciones socioeconómicas profundas para proteger la salud y biodiversidad Jaume Grau y Jesús Martín
  • Mojarse para combatir la pérdida de biodiversidad marina Cecilia del Castillo

EN PROFUNDIDAD

  • Defensa territorial de la biodiversidad por pueblos indígenas en América Latina: vías legales y espacialidades alternativas Tlacaelel Rivera-Núñez y Elizabeth Castro-Salcido
  • ¿De quién es y quién decide sobre la biodiversidad? Un análisis crítico del Convenio sobre la Diversidad Biológica Anne Tittor, Eduardo Relly y Maria Backhouse
  • Insectos, biodiversidad amenazada en un mundo cambiante Eduardo Galante
  • La financiación de la conservación de los bosques no debe realizarse mediante compensaciones de biodiversidad Davi de Souza Martins

BREVES

  • Autodegradación: el Convenio sobre la Diversidad Biológica y su nuevo Marco Mundial de Biodiversidad S. Faizi
  • Protección ambiental antártica: limitaciones y desafíos del sistema de áreas protegidas Martín Andrés Díaz
  • Debates entre biología de la conservación y ecología política en un área protegida de Mendoza, Argentina Camilo Arcos, Pehuén Barzola Elizagaray, Ofelia Agoglia y Juan Alvarez
  • Políticas de conservación de la biodiversidad e inclusión de las comunidades en las áreas naturales protegidas de México Nancy Arzipe, Adan Peña Fuente y José Feliciano González Jiménez
  • El comercio entre la Unión Europea y el Mercosur arrasa con la biodiversidad Tom Kucharz
  • Biorregiones: espacios para la vida y para la diversidad de la vida Nerea Morán Alonso y José Luis Fernández Casadevante
  • ¿Exterminio de especies para salvar la biodiversidad? Jordi López Ortega

REDES DE RESISTENCIA

  • Contrahegemonía y biodiversidad: las consultas populares en el Ecuador Jorge Enrique Forero y Alex Samaniego
  • Implicancias de la movilización ambientalista en la conservación y gestión de cangrejales de marisma en Uruguay Estela Delgado

REFERENTES AMBIENTALES

  • Entrevista a Unai Pascual Joan Martínez Alier
  • Entrevista a Patricia Balvanera Joan Martínez Alier
  • Entrevista a Paola Arias Joan Martínez Alier

CRÍTICA DE LIBROS

  • Naturalezas neoliberales: conflictos en torno al extractivismo urbano-inmobiliario Laura Herrera

Politique Africaine

2023, Nº 171/172
Souverainté économique et fondements du pouvoir au Maroc

Le Maroc actuel est saturé de références à la souveraineté économique, à l’instar de ce qu’a donné à voir la gestion du tremblement de terre de septembre 2023. Ce dossier, qui constitue le cœur de ce numéro double, a pour objectif de déconstruire cette notion ambivalente et plurielle. Il vise à mettre en évidence la diversité et la subtilité des enjeux politiques et économiques derrière les revendications toujours plus nombreuses de souveraineté. En abordant la souveraineté par ses modalités, le cas marocain permet de mettre en lumière les lieux d’exercice du pouvoir, les pratiques politiques ordinaires et les représentations de l’économie politique – autrement dit, les fondements économiques du pouvoir. Plus précisément, le dossier s’intéresse aux différentes manières par lesquelles la souveraineté économique est confortée ou revendiquée. Il rassemble des contributions sur les pouvoirs locaux, les trajectoires d’entreprises et d’entrepreneurs, la production et la vente de denrées alimentaires ou de cannabis, ou encore l’activité d’une commission nationale. Toutes éclairent l’importance, la diversité et la contingence des sources de souveraineté, ainsi que les conflits qu’elle suscite.

Le Dossier

  • Souveraineté économique, lieu du politique. Réflexions à partir du cas du Maroc. Nadia Hachimi-Alaoui et Béatrice Hibou
  • Des ambivalences de la souveraineté économique: ce que nous dit la Commission pour un nouveau modèle de développement. Entretien avec Mohamed Tozy. Réalisé par Béatrice Hibou
  • Souveraineté économique et capitalisme de dissidence au Maroc. Jouer les conflits politiques dans la discrétion. Irene Bono
  • Fleurs des champs. L’énonciation politique du cannabis au Maroc. Federico Reginato
  • Comment gouverne-t-on la sécurité alimentaire? Contrôler les prix, un exercice feuilleté de la souveraineté économique. Beatrice Ferlaino
  • L’impossible politique des champions nationaux au Maroc. Souveraineté, imaginaire politique et modes de gouvernement. Béatrice Hibou
  • Économie et souveraineté économique dans les jeux de pouvoir au Maroc. Une analyse à partir des représentants territoriaux. Nadia Hachimi-Alaoui

Recherches

  • Les entrepreneurs de l’immobilité. Ascensions sociales, participations et contestations dans la lutte contre l’émigration irrégulière en Côte d’Ivoire. Camille Cassarini
  • «Boussan à vie» : une réforme extralégale des terriens autochtones en pays wè (département de Bangolo, Côte d’Ivoire). Tangui Przybylowski

Conjoncture

  • Le coup d’État au Niger, entre réformisme civil et conservatisme militaire. Beatrice Bianchi et Bokar Sangaré

Lectures

  • L’ordre de la transgression. La souveraineté à l’épreuve du temps global, par Patrice Yengo, commenté par Ambroise Kom, Benoit Beucher, Armando Cutolo et Stéphanie Mulot, débat dirigé par Béatrice Hibou et Boris Samuel
  • José Miguel Ribeiro (réalisé par), Film d’animation Nayola (par Chloé Buire)
  • Stéphanie Soubrier, Races guerrières. Enquête sur une catégorie impériale, 1850-1918 (par Vincent Joly)
  • Amrita Pande, Ruchi Chaturvedi et Daya Shari (dir.) *Epistemic Justice and the Postcolonial University* (par Fanny Chabrol)
  • Raymond Silverman, George Abungu et Peter Probst (dir.), National Museums in Africa: Identity, History and Politics (par Marian Nur Goni)
RSS

Boletín de Hemeroteca Hegoa nº 37: 1ª quincena Noviembre 2010

Recibidas: de 01 de Noviembre del 2010 a 12 de Noviembre del 2010
Publicación Año/Nº Artículos
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 1
Migration, transfers and economic decision making among agricultural households.
  • The impact of Conditional Cash Transfers on Consumption and Investment in Nicaragua.
  • Conditional cash transfers and agricultural production: Lessons from the Oportunidades Experience in Mexico.
  • Does Migration make rural households more productive? Evidence from Mexico.
  • Moving forward, looking back: the impact of migration and remittances on assets, consumption and credit constraints in the rural Philippines.
  • Seasonal migration and agricultural production in Vietnam.
  • The vanishing farms? The impact of international migration on Albanian family farming.
  • Agricultural land use and asset accumulation in migrant households: the case of El Salvador.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 2
Microfinance
  • Does contingent repayment in Microfinance help the poor during natural disasters?
  • The effects of a calamity on income and wellbeing of poor Microfinance borrowers: The case of the 2004 Tsunami shock.
  • Credit for what? Informal credit as a coping strategy of market women in Northern Ghana.
  • Changing resouce profiles: Aspirations among orphans in Central Mozambique in the context of an AIDS Migration intervention.
  • Random growth in Africa? Lessons from an evaluation of the growth evidence on Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia, 1965-1995.
  • The impact of Bt. Cotton on poor households in rural India.
  • An inquiry into the Development process of village industries: The case of a Knitwear Cluster in Northern Vietnam.
  • Moving out of poverty in Tanzania: Evidence from Kagera.
  • The Worldwide Government Indicators: Six, one, or none?
  • Global inequality in well-being dimensions.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 3
Human Development
  • Women's empowerment across generations in Bangladesh.
  • Marrying contested approaches: Empowerment and the imposition of international principles: Domestic violence case reolutions in Indonesia.
  • A multinomial model of fertility choice and offspring sex relations in India.
  • Wealth: crucial but not sufficient - evidence from Pakistan on economic growth, child labour and schooling.
  • Health human capital, height and wages in China.
  • Making the grade? Private education in Northern India.
  • The rural-urban divide in China: Income but not happiness?
  • Reducing the educational gap: Good results in vulnerable groups.
  • Foreign assistance and the struggle agains HIV/AIDS in the Developing world.
  • The rise of obesity in transition: Theory and empirical evidence from Russia.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 4
Descentralised governance
  • Ambiguous institutions: Traditional Governance and Local Democracy in South India.
  • Can information about local Government performance induce civic participation? Evidence from the Philippines.
  • How important is the Capacity of Local Governments for improvements in welfare? Evidence from Descentralised Uganda.
  • Village elections, public goods investments and pork barrel politics, Chinese-style.
  • The political economy of village sanitation in South India: Capture or poor information?
  • Which institutions are good for your health? The deep determinants of comparative cross-country healthstatus.
  • Legal environment, finance channels and ivestment: The East African example.
  • Do Governments in Developing Countries pursue sustainable debt policies? Empirical evidence for selected countries in Africa and Latin America.
  • Remittances, poverty, inequality and welgfare: Evidence from the Central Plateau of Burkina Faso.
  • Learning by Southern Peace NGOs.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 5
UNU-WIDER special issue on fragility and development in Small Island Developing States.
  • Vulnerability, trade, financial flows and state failure in Small Island Developing States. *Assesing the economic vulnerability of Small Island Developing States and the Least Developed Countries.
  • Terms of trade shocks and the current account in Small Island Developing States.
  • The short-run macroeconomic impact of Foreign aid to small states: An agnostic time series analysis.
  • Aid and growth in Small Island Developing States.
  • Aid and Dutch disease in the South Pacific and in other Small Island States.
  • Remittances in Small Island Developing States.
  • Paradise lost: The costs of State failure in the Pacific.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 6
Rural development.
  • Risk, credit constraints and financial efficiency in Peruvian Agriculture.
  • The balance of power in rural marketing networks: A case study of Snake Trading in Cambodia.
  • Understanding the evolution of rice technology in China - from traditional agriculture to GM rice today.
  • Institutions and poverty.
  • Does oil still hinder democracy?
  • Industrialisation after a Deep Economic Crisis: Indonesia.
  • How infraestructure and financial institutions affect rural income and poverty: Evidence from Bangladesh.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 7
The government of chronic poverty.
  • The government of chronic poverty: From exclusion to citizenship?
  • A relational approach to durable poverty, inequality and power.
  • Grounding "Responsabilisation talk": Masculinities, citizenship and HIV in Cape Town, South Africa.
  • Rectifying the anti-politics of citizen participation: Insight from the internal politics of a Subaltern Community in Nepal.
  • Governing chronic povertyu under inclusive liberalism: The case of the Northern Uganda Social Action Fund.
  • Making development agents: participation and boundary object in International Development.
  • School exclusion as social exclusion: the practices and effects of a Conditional Cash Transfer Programmes for the Poor in Bangladesh.
  • "We always lived here": Indigenous Movements, Citizenship and Poverty in Argentina.
  • Decentring poverty, reworking government: Social Movements and states in the government of poverty.
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, The Journal of 2010, Vol. 46, Nº 8
  • The Donor problems: An experimental analysis of beneficiary empowerment.
  • Small retailers in Brazil: are formal firms really more productive?
  • FDI liberalisation, firm heterogeneity and foreign ownership: German firms dedisions in reforming India.
  • Imports of intermediate inputs and spillover effects: Evidence from Chilean Plants.
  • National model of technological catching up and innovation: Comparing patents of Taiwan and South Korea.
  • Educational attainment and attitudes towards war in Muslim Countries contemplating war: The case of Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan and Turkey.
  • Sources of civic engagement in Latin america: Empirical evidence from rural Ecuadorian communities.
  • Are women as likely to take risks and compete? Behavioral findings from Central Vietnam.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 3
  • Aid and debt relief in Africa: Have they been substitutes or complements?
  • Is corporate aid targeted to poor and deserving countries? A case study of Nestle's Aid Allocation.
  • Is corruption and efficient grease?
  • Growth and inequality in India: Analysis of an extended social accounting matrix.
  • Accounting for inequality in India: Evidence from household expenditures.
  • Schooling investments over three decades in rural Tamil Nadu, India: Changing effects of income, gender and adult family member's education.
  • Child nutrition, health problems, and school achievements in Sri Lanka.
  • Female empowerment: Impact of commitment savings product in the Philippines.
  • Relative to what or whom? The importance of norms and relative standing to well-being in South Africa.
  • A test of the new variant famine hypothesis: Panel survey evidence from Zambia.
  • Health insurance and other risk-coping strategies in Uganda: The case of Microfinance Insurance Lt.
  • Life is unfair in Latin America, but does it matter for growth?
  • Complementary labor regulation: The uncoordinated combination of state and private regulators in the Dominican Republic.
  • Do interventions of school level improve educational outcomes? Evidence from Rural Program in Colombia.
  • Doing it for themselves: direct Action Land Reform in the Brazilian amazon.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 4
  • The developing world's budgeting (but vulnerable) middle class.
  • Social Security regimes, global estimates, and good practices: The status of social protection for international migrants.
  • Global infant mortality: Correcting for undercounting.
  • Is foreign aid a vanguard of foreign direct investment? A Gravity-Equation Approach.
  • Ivestment climate and FDI in developing countries: Some evidence from Korea.
  • Who beniets from promoting small enterprises? Some empirical evidence from Ethiopia.
  • Poverty status and the impact of Formal Credit on Technology use and wellbeing among Ethiopian smallholders.
  • Impact of access to credit on labor allocation patterns in Malawi.
  • Credit Program Participation and child schooling in rural Malawi.
  • Promising approaches to address the needs of poor female farmers: Resources, constraints, amnd interventions.
  • Are female-headed households more food insecure? Evidence from Bangladesh.
  • Do rights work? Law, activism, and the employment guarantee scheme.
  • One size fits all? Decentralization, corruption, and the monitoring of bureaucrats.
  • Vulnerability of victims of civil conflicts: Empirical evidence for the displaced population in Colombia.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 5
  • Growing out of poverty: Trends and patterns of urban poverty in China 1988-2002.
  • The effect of ILO minimum age Conventions on Child Labor and school attendance: Evidence from aggregate and individual level data. Corruption, manufacturing plan growth, and the Asian Paradox: Indonesian evidence.
  • How important are locational characteristics for rural non-agricultural employment? Lessons from Brazil.
  • Jump-starting self-employment? Evidence for welfare participants in argentina.
  • Disentangling bargaining power from individual and household level for institutions: Evidence on women's position in Ethiopia.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 6
Globalization, poverty, and inequality in Latin America.
  • Globalization, poverty, and inequality in Latin America: Findings from case studies.
  • Trade liberalization and the self-employed in Mexico.
  • Globalization and smallholders: The adoption, diffusion, and welfare impact of non-traditional export crops in Guatemala.
  • Remittances and vulnerability to poverty in rural Mexico.
  • Globalization and formal sector migration in Brazil.
  • Seasonal migration and early childhood development.
  • Earnings mobility in times of growth and decline: Argentina from 1996 to 2003.
  • Linkages between pro-poor growth, social programs and labor market: The recent Brazilian experience.
  • Globalization and the role of public transferts in redistributing income in Latin America and the Caribbean.
  • Minimum wages, globalization, and poverty in Honduras.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 7
  • Community-based risk management arrangements: A review.
  • "Trade matters in the fight agains poverty": Narratives, perceptions, and (lack of) evidence in the case of fish trade in Africa.
  • Assets, activity choices, and civil war: Evidence from Burundi.
  • Who should be interviewed in Surveys of Household income?
  • Women's empowerment and the creation of social capital in Indian villages.
  • How does Public Assistance affect family expenditures? The case of urban China.
  • Nutrient intake of the poor and its implications for the nutritional effect of cereal price subsidies: Evidence from China.
  • Adult BMI as a health and nutritional inequality measure: Applications at macro and micro levels.
  • the impact of improved Maize Varieties on poverty in Mexico: A prospensity score-matching approach.
  • Poverty and inequality among ethnic groups in Chile.
  • Remittances and their unintended consequences in Cuba.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 8
  • Are international databases on corruption reliable? A comparison of expert opinion surveys and household surveys in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Financial reforms, patent protection, and knowledge accumulation in India.
  • Patent incentives, technology markets, and public-private bio-medical innovation networks in Brazil.
  • Does stronger intellectual property rights protection induce more bilateral trade? Evidence from China's imports.
  • Exchange rate volatility and employment growth in developing countries: Evidence from Turkey.
  • Return migration and occupational choice: Evidence from Albania.
  • Values, cultural practices, and economic performance: Theory and some evidence from Kenya.
WORLD DEVELOPMENT 2010, Vol. 38, Nº 9
  • Good for living? On the relations between globalization and life expectancy?
  • Debt relief, investment and growth.
  • Geographical diversification of developing country exports.
  • Regulating water services for all in developing economies.
  • Promoting transparency in the NGO sector: Examining the availability and reliability of self-reported data.
  • A rural-urban comparison of manufacturing enterprise performance in Ethiopia.
  • Employment vulnerability and earnings in urban West-Africa.
  • The Global Food Crisis and Guatemala: What crisis and for whom?