News headlines for “Free Trade and Globalization”, page 101

  1. Nigeria to Expand Education Access Through a Student Loan Scheme

    - Inter Press Service

    ABUJA, Nigeria, Aug 14 (IPS) - Wisdom Ajah, an 18-year-old senior secondary school graduate living in Karshi, a satellite town in Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory, dreams of a university education that will secure him a good job after graduation and help support his family. But it is a distant dream considering how many obstacles he has faced trying to acquire a secondary school certificate.

  2. From ashes to riches: Profiting from peatland in Indonesia

    - UN News

    Farmers in the Indonesian province of West Kalimantan on the island of Borneo are adapting their agricultural techniques with a more climate-friendly approach by ending the burning of land thanks to an initiative by Indonesia’s Peat and Mangrove Restoration Agency (BRGM), with support from the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS).

  3. POWER TO THE YOUTH: With Quality Education, Youth are Empowered with the Green Skills to Save Our Planet

    - Inter Press Service

    NEW YORK, Aug 12 (IPS) -To save our people and our planet from the life-threatening risks of the climate crisis, we must invest in the education of today’s youth. They will be the climate activists, climate scientists, climate innovators, game-changers and leaders of the 21st century green economy.

  4. Disappearing Fish Spell Hard Times for Women in Zimbabwe

    - Inter Press Service

    BULAWAYO, ZIMBABWE, Aug 10 (IPS) - Zimbabwe's ballooning informal sector has, in recent years, spawned the over-exploitation of the country's natural resources, with the fisheries taking some of the most felt battering.

  5. Taking Stock of Two Decades of Trailblazing Protocol on Womens Rights in Africa

    - Inter Press Service

    NAIROBI, Aug 09 (IPS) - It promised to be the most defining, groundbreaking, and transformative protocol on African women’s rights. Specific in its approach, broad in its reach, and unique in its all-encompassing nature, covering issues such as HIV/Aids, widow inheritance and property disinheritance in a most unprecedented manner.

  6. Mining Revenues Undermined

    - Inter Press Service

    KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Aug 09 (IPS) - The primary commodity price boom early this century has often been attributed to a commodity ‘super-cycle’, i.e., a price upsurge greater than what might be expected in ‘normal’ booms. This was largely due to some minerals as most agricultural commodity price increases were more modest.

  7. A Flawed GDP Bypasses Womens Unpaid Care Work

    - Inter Press Service

    LONDON, Aug 08 (IPS) - Last week the IMF offered a cautious estimate of positive global economic growth for this year, warning ‘we are on track, but not out of the woods’. But with the IMF and governments continuing to use gross domestic product (GDP) as the dominant measure of economic progress, a more appropriate warning might be that ‘we’ are failing to see the wood for the trees.

  8. G20: Cutting Food Loss and Waste is an Opportunity to Improve Food Security

    - Inter Press Service

    CHICAGO, USA, Aug 08 (IPS) - The writer is President & CEO, The Global Food Banking NetworkWith the ongoing global food crisis—triggered by the COVID pandemic, disasters, supply chain disruptions, and conflict in Ukraine—food security should be at the top of the G20 agenda when countries gather in India in September 2023.

  9. Cambodia's Election a Blatant Farce

    - Inter Press Service

    MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Aug 04 (IPS) - The title shouldn’t fool you: Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is one of the world’s longest-ruling autocrats. A political survivor, this former military commander had been bolted to his chair since 1985, presiding over what he turned into a de facto one-party system – and now apparently a dynastic regime.

  10. Scramble For Africa: It's Not 1884 All Over Again, Is It?

    - Inter Press Service

    ABUJA, Aug 01 (IPS) - Not all wars are fought on the battleground. The Cold War has taught us that certain wars could go on for decades, without overt violence. Perhaps, we are in the middle of another one with China as the new rival to the United States of America. This time, the ‘battlefield’ is Africa.

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