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British foreign secretary says country must make shrewd use of donor support to effect political, social and economic transformation
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In his report, Ban Ki-moon backs the 17 goals and 169 targets proposed by the UN working group, despite the difficulty member states may have in communicating them
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Afghanistan received $45.6bn in aid from the OECD group of rich countries between 2002-12. Where did the money go? And was it well spent?
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Investing in reproductive healthcare would bring huge benefits for women and children and reduce long-term costs, says report by Guttmacher Institute and UN
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Alleged human traffickers who had arranged more than 20 boat trips from north Africa to Europe picked up in sting operation in Italy and Germany
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London conference shines spotlight on troubled nation after 13-year foreign military mission that cost thousands of lives and billions of dollars, writes Clár Ní Chonghaile
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Transparency International’s measure of perceived public sector corruption says emerging countries increasingly seen as prone to fraud and bribery
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Are you taking part in the campaign to challenge attitudes to gender-based violence?
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The prime minister, David Cameron, says strengthening security partnerships with Afghanistan will help defeat terrorism
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Police launch investigation after at least 15 patients lose vision and others develop infections after procedure at medical camp
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In his report, Ban Ki-moon backs the 17 goals and 169 targets proposed by the UN working group, despite the difficulty member states may have in communicating them
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British foreign secretary says country must make shrewd use of donor support to effect political, social and economic transformation
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Investing in reproductive healthcare would bring huge benefits for women and children and reduce long-term costs, says report by Guttmacher Institute and UN
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Alleged human traffickers who had arranged more than 20 boat trips from north Africa to Europe picked up in sting operation in Italy and Germany
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London conference shines spotlight on troubled nation after 13-year foreign military mission that cost thousands of lives and billions of dollars, writes Clár Ní Chonghaile
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Transparency International’s measure of perceived public sector corruption says emerging countries increasingly seen as prone to fraud and bribery
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Examination of 400 cases shows 57% of bribes were paid to win public procurement contracts, with most occurring in wealthy countries
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Jordan has been widely praised for its efforts but there is hostility towards the million-plus Syrians who have fled war
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WHO targets on isolating patients and medical burials missed as NGO warns virus has reduced country to ‘a nation of mere beggars’
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Mizengo Pinda accused of authorising unlawful offshore payments under guise of energy contracts a month after donors withhold funding amid corruption fears
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Club Deportivo Palestino has become a focal point for tensions between Santiago’s sizeable Arab and Jewish communities
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London conference shines spotlight on troubled nation after 13-year foreign military mission that cost thousands of lives and billions of dollars, writes Clár Ní Chonghaile
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Crisis pushes World Food Programme into changing role from food delivery to buidling treatment centres to tackle Ebola
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‘A woman has the right to dress the way she sees fit,’ protestors proclaim, but many argue that ‘scantily clad’ women only have themselves to blame
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How a trafficking survivor broke free to set up an organisation to help fellow victims reclaim their lives
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Homa Khaleeli: An extraordinary five-year project that documents the intimate lives of women and children in Pakistan
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Australian summit must find space in crowded communiqué for sustainable growth, climate change and tax and transparency, writes Graham Gordon
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Measles deaths have gone up, not down, in the last year. Progress towards elimination of the disease that kills and disables thousands of children has stopped in its tracks as funding has been cut back in the global recession
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The prime minister, David Cameron, says strengthening security partnerships with Afghanistan will help defeat terrorism
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Decades of conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo have resulted in scant investment in healthcare, leaving the country vulnerable to outbreaks of disease. After a measles epidemic last year, Mèdecins sans Frontiéres took its vaccination campaign to villages in the eastern provinces
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Brazil's asbestos industry is exacting a terrible human toll. Up to 15,000 Brazilians die of asbestos-related diseases annually, yet there is no political will for change
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Community monitors in Zimbabwe have been trained by NGO PhotoVoice to provide information on sanitation in their areas
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Throughout the US, women sold as sex workers for commercial gain are branded with tattoos by their traffickers
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Women surviving on the margins in Pakistan open their homes to photojournalist Alixandra Fazzina
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Ghana's trade minister says the economic outlook is good, despite the IMF's predicted economic slowdown
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Tens of thousands of South Sudanese people have poured across the border into Ethiopia to escape conflict in recent months
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To mark the first anniversary of typhoon Haiyan, the Catholic aid agency Cafod visited survivors in the Philippines. These images show the few precious things they were able to save
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Global development podcast What does the Ebola crisis reveal about the state of global health? – podcast
The tardy initial response to the Ebola outbreak in west Africa was compounded by flawed health systems. We examine why the global health community was so slow to mobilise, and what can be done to prevent a recurrence of the crisis
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São Paulo is changing its approach to tackling drug addiction. Hospitalisation and police interventions have given way to a programme that provides food, housing and jobs for addicts
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Ekwow Spio-Garbrah, Ghana's minister for trade and industry, believes the international community did not mobilise swiftly enough in the face of the Ebola outbreak. Arguing that neither European nor African countries have done enough to support the states affected, he has called for faster, more coordinated action from governments and improved pre-planning to deal with unexpected crises
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Somaliland president, Ahmed Mohamed Mahmoud Silanyo, on how his country is appealing to governments for recognition
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Mozambique is holding elections on Wednesday, with the ruling Frelimo party having to defend itself against accusations of landgrabs
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Njala Giema is a village in eastern Sierra Leone, set deep in the forest off the highway from Kenema to Kailahun. The hamlet had a population of about 200 people; at least 61 have died since Ebola struck in May
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With the help of an NGO that campaigns to alleviate the plight of manual scavengers, former human waste gatherer Uganta Umarwal has transformed her life for the better
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Mexico's complex and polarised abortion debate has had a direct impact on the lives of two young women in the country
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One year has passed since the armed group M23 withdrew from Kiwanja town in eastern Congo, ending an 18-month uprising
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Geography game How well do you know the world?
Play the Global development game: identify the world's countries and territories, rank them according to GDP then fingers at the ready for the picture round -
Food game Can your culinary knowledge bear fruit?
If you know your oats from your oils, then pit your wits against our food game. With the timer eating away vital seconds, you'll need to guess where different world foods come from, rank countries by rates of undernourishment, and negotiate a tricky picture round. If you've got an appetite for the challenge, just click below to get started …
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Are you feeling flush with knowledge? Or do you hide in the closet when it comes to sanitation?
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Do you know your super greens, grains and fruits and where they originate from?
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There are only 500 days until the MDGs, established to tackle the world's biggest problems, expire
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Thirsty for knowledge about water? Dive into our quiz to test how much you know about H2O
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OECD countries say they give developing countries billions of dollars in aid each year. Do you know what counts as aid? And do you know how much countries are spending?
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Can you tell your quinoa from your bulgur? Test your knowledge of the world's oldest grains
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From high-level panel meetings on the future of development to the G8 in Lough Erne and climate talks in Warsaw, the world of international development has had an awful lot to say for itself over the past 12 months. Were your ears pricked? Test your powers of attention paying with our quiz of 2013
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Pit your wits against Hans Rosling, the data Jedi master. The Swedish professor presents, Don't Panic: The Truth About Population, on BBC2 on Thursday
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Each year, International Rivers holds a day of action for rivers and against dams to draw attention to the plight of many of the world's waterways. Do you know your Mississippi from your Mekong?
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Test your wits in our global development quiz of 2012
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Test your wits in our global development quotes quiz of 2012
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Can you tell your Soesilos from your Sirleafs? Does Ifad come in 16 and 32 GB versions, or is it something else altogether? Test your development knowledge with our seasonal quiz
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Test your knowledge of development from stories, blogs and statistics published on the Global development site this year
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Women's rights and gender equality Spending $25 a woman annually on healthcare could save millions of lives
Investing in reproductive healthcare would bring huge benefits for women and children and reduce long-term costs, says report by Guttmacher Institute and UN -
Alleged human traffickers who had arranged more than 20 boat trips from north Africa to Europe picked up in sting operation in Italy and Germany
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We look at children’s rights 25 years after the UN convention; and where are women’s voices as London readies for a conference on Afghanistan
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Mizengo Pinda accused of authorising unlawful offshore payments under guise of energy contracts a month after donors withhold funding amid corruption fears
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In his report, Ban Ki-moon backs the 17 goals and 169 targets proposed by the UN working group, despite the difficulty member states may have in communicating them
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Neonatal conditions claim 3,000 lives every day, and have replaced infections as leading cause of death, study shows
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Club Deportivo Palestino has become a focal point for tensions between Santiago’s sizeable Arab and Jewish communities
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New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition US criticised over increased private sector investment in Africa
New Alliance agriculture initiative risks prioritising profit over people and pushing poor farmers further into poverty -
Ghana's trade minister says the economic outlook is good, despite the IMF's predicted economic slowdown
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Transparency International’s measure of perceived public sector corruption says emerging countries increasingly seen as prone to fraud and bribery
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Countries failing to turn good strategies into programmes that actually provide people with clean water and good sanitation
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Ivory Coast is the world’s largest exporter of the beans used to make chocolate, with most of the crops coming from small farms or collectives. One of these is known as Blayeya, a women’s-only association in which each member owns a field and the labour is shared. Photographer Thierry Gouegnon captured them at work
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Pit your wits against our tricky humanitarian quiz
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About 140 million girls around the world are living with the consequences of FGM. Kenya has banned the practice but it remains prevalent in some communities. Reuters photographer Siegfried Modola gained rare access to a ceremony:
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An auction of work from up-and-coming artists from the continent and diaspora is being run online in December. Here are some of our favourites:
Aid naysayers lack logic and compassion – 0.7% target should be enshrined in law