G8, G20 and the "Great Global Guilt Trip"
July 4, 2010 3 min. read

The lead-up to the G8 and G20 meetings in Toronto week before last witnessed a slew of commentary, most detailing the demise of the G8 and the rise of its larger sibling, the G20.  While this is not a new theme, it is a consistent one (Jeff Sachs asked the question on everyone’s mind in […]

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A positive return on women
July 3, 2010 1 min. read

Check out the pocket card on investing in women from the Women Deliver conference, which advocates for a $12 billion increase in funding for family planning and maternal and newborn care, projected to increase social and economic productivity by $15 billion, currently lost to maternal and newborn death.

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Testing rape-preventing condoms in South Africa
July 3, 2010 1 min. read

Last year, in June, a study was released in South Africa which found that more than one in four men in South Africa admitted to raping a woman.  During the World Cup, 30,000 women have been given condoms, or tampon-like devices, which have “teeth”, or hooks inside that attach to a man’s penis during penetration.  Once […]

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A peek into the Global Fund
July 3, 2010 1 min. read

For those wanting better insight into the inner-workings of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, I highly recommend the lengthy and meaty transcript from the Council on Foreign Relations conversation with Michael Kazatchkine (the Global Fund’s Executive Director) earlier this month.  Of note: …everything that we would fund is evidence-based, so all of […]

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Wikileaks
July 1, 2010 3 min. read

In October 2008 I attended the International Anti-Corruption Conference. On a bus from the hotel to a reception, I sat next to someone named Julian Assange. At the time, I did not know who he was. He told me he worked for a group called Wikileaks, which was not a wiki but rather a website […]

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The most corrupt state (and I mean U.S.)
June 27, 2010 3 min. read

Every year Transparency International ranks nearly all countries in the world in its Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI). In 2009 the United States ranked a respectable 19 out of 180. But within the United States there is considerable variation. Anyone who follows national news might make their own U.S. Corruption Perceptions Index, with the sheer size […]

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Amidst World Cup excitement, some good news from South Africa
June 27, 2010 2 min. read

I admit, I’m completely caught up in World Cup fever.  It’s obvious from my decline in postings since the games opened two weeks ago.  Most evenings I’m glued to the television screen and most mornings I awake to the sound of vuvuzelas on the streets at 6am.  So, in the mayhem, I somehow missed the encouraging […]

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Finding the bright spots for radical change
June 25, 2010 3 min. read

One of the particularly entertaining keynotes at the Social Impact Exchange conference was given by Dan Heath, co-author of Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard.  He spoke about “finding the bright spots” or looking for what is working instead of what is not working.  One of his examples was “positive deviance“, a theory for social […]

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Scaling innovation in health
June 20, 2010 1 min. read

I spent the last three days in New York City attending the Social Impact Exchange’s inaugural conference on scaling.  The theme was “Taking social innovation to scale” and boasted an impressive line-up of speakers and participants, including Robert Steel, Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, Judith Rodin, Nancy Roob, and David Gergen.  Over the next few days, I’ll be […]

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Treating the dual epidemic of TB and HIV
June 14, 2010 2 min. read

A few months back, I noted the shocking statistics on tuberculosis, highlighting that one-third of the world’s population are infected and 1.7 million people die from the disease each year.  This month’s tuberculosis (TB) conference, held in Durban, South Africa, highlighted the need for integration of TB and HIV care.   I met Prof Harry Hausler, the chair […]

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TB facility in Florida: a "paragon and anachronism"
June 14, 2010 1 min. read

The NYTimes has written a vivid account of how the US approach to tuberculosis care has changed as the disease has virtually been eradicated.  They describe the last TB sanitorium, which still exists in Florida “where strangers live together for months with boredom, pills, pain, contemplation and the same ancient disease that killed George Orwell, Franz Kafka […]

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Handheld Anti-corruption
June 10, 2010 2 min. read

Mobile phones have already transformed life in developing countries. They have brought phone service to remote areas that had little hope of ever seeing landlines. They have also had major economic benefits for so-called micro-entrepreneurs, helping them with everything from establishing mobile barbershops to determining the best time to bring goods to market. And now […]

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