Pork Over Doing the Right Thing: The US Foreign Aid Budget
October 7, 2011 4 min. read

To absolutely no one’s surprise, the US Congress is still going after foreign aid in an attempt to seem tough on spending, as The New York Times reported this week.  Although there appear to be few developments since I wrote about this issue in July, the discussions and subsequent hand-wringing are back in the open.  […]

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It’s Time for Individuals to Demand More Action on Non-Communicable Diseases
September 30, 2011 6 min. read

The UN High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) was held last week in New York and resulted in the adoption of a Political Declaration (PDF here).  As I feared a few weeks ago, the declaration is weak and does not set hard goals or targets to curb the NCD epidemic, which caused two-thirds of […]

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The Benefits of a Constituent Assembly for Tunisia and the Arab Spring.
September 30, 2011 10 min. read

Next month (October 23rd) the people of Tunisia will vote to elect a Constituent Assembly, with the primary task of drafting a new constitution!  The National Constituent Assembly (NCA) will be composed of 218 members, and will have to draft a new constitution for Tunisia within a year.  Furthermore, the NCS will also elect from […]

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The World Loses a Champion of Development in Wangari Maathai
September 27, 2011 2 min. read

Wangari Maathai, Nobel laureate and founder of the Green Belt Movement in Kenya, passed away late Sunday night while undergoing cancer treatment in Nairobi. But she left the world having fully lived her 71 years, to the benefit of the rest of us. Like many prominent women her age, Maathai had to break through many […]

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Reading Day…
September 16, 2011 9 min. read

    Today, I’d like to share articles published this week that explore developments and discoveries in global health.  Drug-resistant strains of bacteria are on the rise, and there is a need for conservation of antibiotics.  Genetically-modified mosquitoes are the latest attempt to curb malaria.  Scientists have used modified HIV-1 to kill leukemia (really).  Medical […]

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Between Isolation and Intervention: Charting an Achievable Development Strategy
September 16, 2011 8 min. read

“[In the decade since 9/11] I think we have learned a lot about limits. But I don’t think the lesson is: We can do nothing to shape better outcomes in the world; we only make things worse. I would say that the American people, far from being interventionist, as they were in the aftermath of […]

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Western Intervention and the Lessons from Libya.
September 14, 2011 10 min. read

As we observe the 10th anniversary of 9/11, and we contemplate what went wrong with the past decade, we should look at Libya for lessons on western intervention!  In the aftermath of 9/11, American neoconservatives tried to ‘liberate’ the Arab world, and bring ‘democracy’ in the Middle East.  It was argued that failed states like […]

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Choosing HIV over Diabetes: The Non-Communicable Disease Epidemic
September 9, 2011 8 min. read

I write often about communicable diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, which get a lot of international attention and popular support, spurred on by celebrities, government leaders, and the media.  What is ignored, however, is the growing epidemic of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), also known as chronic or “lifestyle” diseases.  With the upcoming United Nations High Level Meeting […]

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MSF President Sparks Debate Over the Limits of Humanitarian Aid
September 7, 2011 4 min. read

Over the weekend, Médecins Sans Frontières president Dr. Unni Karunakara created a stir by chastising charities for creating an unrealistic expectation of what humanitarian aid was capable of achieving in Somalia. According to Karunakara: There is a con, there is an unrealistic expectation being peddled that you give your £50 and suddenly those people are […]

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Parks, Parklets, and Green Spaces: Improving Health and Other Social Factors
September 2, 2011 6 min. read

I’ve made a recent move to San Francisco, California, and a few days ago, I found myself wandering around The Mission, a neighborhood that is undergoing rapid gentrification.  Apart from the somewhat small but popular Dolores Park (pictured left), there isn’t a lot of green space in the area, in contrast with many other (generally […]

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Constitutional Reforms in Morocco and Jordan!
September 1, 2011 9 min. read

Reports coming out of Morocco and Jordan are both encouraging and frustrating.  Both Morocco and Jordan have been beset for months by growing popular demands for political, economic and social reform, after Arab uprisings overthrew leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya and shook other regional states. However, unlike other Arab states witnessing popular uprisings, demonstrations […]

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South Africa: Stop Human Rights Violations that Result in Maternal Deaths
August 20, 2011 7 min. read

Just in time for National Women’s Day in South Africa, Human Rights Watch published a report last week on failing maternal care in the country.  South Africa has seen its maternal mortality ratio quadruple in the last ten years.  The report focuses on the Eastern Cape, one of the least developed provinces in the country, […]

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