-
Joyce Banda on Reaching Girls Before Age 10, Balancing Tradition With Change, and More
›If you really want to fight the patriarchy, if you want to make a difference in girls’ lives, you have to reach them when they are young, says Joyce Banda.
-
Have China’s Missing Girls Actually Been There All Along?
›For the past two decades, scholars and policymakers have examined the phenomenon of China’s missing females and corresponding numbers of involuntary bachelors to better understand the causes and consequences of the state’s demographic plight. China has both a heavily skewed male to female sex ratio and faces a drastically shrinking population in coming years.
-
President Joyce Banda Talks About Her Time in Office & Sensitizing African Leaders to Maternal Health Challenges
›Joyce Banda, Malawi’s first female vice president, became Malawi’s first female president in 2012 after the sudden death of Bungu wa Mutharika in office. From day one, maternal health and girls’ education were a priority in her administration, she tells the Maternal Health Initiative’s Roger-Mark De Souza in an interview at the Wilson Center.
-
2017 Is Pivotal for U.S. Leadership on Global Water Security
›2017 promises to be a key year for U.S. government leadership on a variety of issues. Not least among them is global water security. Never have the challenges of global water security been so severe, and never have the opportunities for American leadership in the sector been greater.
-
State of the World Population 2016, and Fostering Development Through Family Planning
›The United Nations Population Fund’s 2016 State of the World Population report calls for investment in a very specific demographic: 10-year-old girls. At age 10, young girls are at a “pivotal” stage in their lives, the report says. They face a world of limitless possibilities, yet far too many end up thwarted in their ambitions by sexual violence, forced marriage, female genital mutilation, child labor, and other “systematic disadvantages.”
-
Mismatched Flood Control System Compounds Water Woes in Southern Bangladesh
›In Koyra Number 6, a coastal hamlet bordering the Sundarbans in southwestern Bangladesh, a group of men unload barrels of water from their trawlers – 50 drums holding 30 liters each. They announce their arrival by yelling. And word spreads. This is how this village gets their daily drinking water, from a town nine miles away.
Yearly archive for 2017.
Show all posts