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eliminating poverty Tagged Articles
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3.1 The public sector: Training priorities, resources and reorientation
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| "While there is long history of poverty-focused training in developed industrial economies, it is still relatively rare in the large majority of developing countries where most of the poor live" (Malik, 1996:46). This seems particularly ironic given that most of the world's poor live in developing countries. The following discussion looks at why public sector training priorities continue to favour non-poor groups. We shall focus in particular on the design of poverty reduction programmes, overall resource availability and competing claims over training resources from other sectors and groups. |
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4.0 Sustainable pro-poor growth and the governance of the labour market: Working Out of Poverty
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| It is revealing to look at the challenge of reducing and eventually eliminating
poverty from the perspective of the drive to create decent work for
women and men. Such a viewpoint helps to focus the attention of public authorities,
from the local to the global level, the social partners and relevant
groups in civil society on how to make institutions and markets serve better
the needs of those most at risk of being trapped in poverty. |
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Other eliminating poverty Related Articles
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Ending Poverty Consciousness
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| This article distinguishes between poverty and poverty consciousness. It gives you practical suggestions for ending these limitations. |
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6.2 Propositions for engaging the international business community: Enterprise solutions to poverty
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| Our second set of propositions relates to the role of
large businesses, especially multinational corporations,
in tackling poverty. Our core position is that
through harnessing its value-creating assets, big
business is especially well-equipped to add
enormous value to pro-poor enterprise initiatives –
and elsewhere in the war against poverty. |
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African Countries Focus on Microfinance: Twelve African Nations Engaged in the International Year of Microcredit to Date
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| Half of the population in Africa lives on less than one dollar a day. More than half the population has no access to safe drinking water. More than two million infants die annually before reaching their first birthday.[1] Such is the harsh reality of the scale of poverty in Africa. The Millennium Development Goals and the objective to halve the proportion of people living in extreme poverty by 2015 has driven a number of regional and national initiatives focused on poverty eradication in Africa based on local needs and priorities. |
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The Role of Microfinance in Addressing the HIV/AIDS Pandemic in Zambia: The Rainbow Model Provides a Future for AIDS Orphans
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| Poverty and HIV/AIDS constitute a vicious circle. Poverty creates vulnerability to HIV/AIDS, and HIV/AIDS leads to poverty. Unfortunately, the interventions of the national and international community are not moving as quickly as the desperation and the loss of hope in the people coping with the pandemic at the grassroots level. |
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2.4 Agricultural workers and rural communities: Working Out of Poverty
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| A better understanding of the social and economic dynamics of rural
communities is critical to the reduction and eradication of poverty. The
world’s poorest countries are those most dependent on agriculture. Threequarters
of the people in extreme poverty live in rural areas. |
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2.8 The foundations of a decent work strategy for poverty reduction: Working Out of Poverty
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| Most analysts of the nature and causes of poverty agree that growth in
per capita income is essential to reducing poverty and that persistent growth
failures are accompanied by a persistent failure to reduce poverty. However,
they have not found a stable relationship between the rate of average per
capita growth and the rate of poverty reduction. |
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3.5 Building local development through cooperatives: Working Out of Poverty
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| The participation of people living in poverty in policies to improve their
livelihood and counteract social exclusion and vulnerability is increasingly
emphasized in poverty reduction strategies. |
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4.0 Sustainable pro-poor growth and the governance of the labour market: Working Out of Poverty
| |
| It is revealing to look at the challenge of reducing and eventually eliminating
poverty from the perspective of the drive to create decent work for
women and men. Such a viewpoint helps to focus the attention of public authorities,
from the local to the global level, the social partners and relevant
groups in civil society on how to make institutions and markets serve better
the needs of those most at risk of being trapped in poverty. |
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5.1 Employment, productivity and social dialogue: Working Out of Poverty
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| The ILO is mandated both by its Constitution and by the United Nations
to examine the functioning of economic, social and financial policies
from the perspective of employment creation as a central goal. Full, productive
and freely chosen employment is the primary means of reducing and
eventually eliminating extreme poverty. Moving toward this objective requires
a steady and brisk pace of growth that is sustainable in environmental,
social and economic terms. |
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5.6 A coherent framework for national and local action: Working Out of Poverty
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| Increased in-depth analysis of the multifaceted experience of poverty is
leading to a growing awareness of the need for a range of policies that are
specific to the problems faced by different communities and countries. Given
that the causes of poverty are many and interconnected, targeted policies
have most effect when they act in combination to break cycles of poverty.
One of the most encouraging aspects of the new approach to poverty reduction
and eradication is therefore the emphasis on policy coherence, based on
a comprehensive development framework. |
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