The Impact of Disability on the Lives of Children; Cross-Sectional Data Including 8,900 Children with Disabilities and 898,834 Children without Disabilities across 30 Countries

PLoS One
[Accessed 13 September 2014]
http://www.plosone.org/

Research Article
The Impact of Disability on the Lives of Children; Cross-Sectional Data Including 8,900 Children with Disabilities and 898,834 Children without Disabilities across 30 Countries
Hannah Kuper mail, Adrienne Monteath-van Dok, Kevin Wing, Lisa Danquah, Jenny Evans,
Maria Zuurmond, Jacqueline Gallinetti
Published: September 09, 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107300
Abstract
Background
Children with disabilities are widely believed to be less likely to attend school or access health care, and more vulnerable to poverty. There is currently little large-scale or internationally comparable evidence to support these claims. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of disability on the lives of children sponsored by Plan International across 30 countries.
Methods and Findings
We conducted a cross-sectional survey including 907,734 children aged 0–17 participating in the Plan International Sponsorship Programme across 30 countries in 2012. Parents/guardians were interviewed using standardised questionnaires including information on: age, sex, health, education, poverty, and water and sanitation facilities. Disability was assessed through a single question and information was collected on type of impairment. The dataset included 8,900 children with reported disabilities across 30 countries. The prevalence of disability ranged from 0.4%–3.0% and was higher in boys than girls in 22 of the 30 countries assessed – generally in the range of 1.3–1.4 fold higher. Children with disabilities were much less likely to attend formal education in comparison to children without disabilities in each of the 30 countries, with age-sex adjusted odds ratios exceeding 10 for nearly half of the countries. This relationship varied by impairment type. Among those attending school, children with disabilities were at a lower level of schooling for their age compared to children without disabilities. Children with disabilities were more likely to report experiencing a serious illness in the last 12 months, except in Niger. There was no clear relationship between disability and poverty.
Conclusions
Children with disabilities are at risk of not fulfilling their educational potential and are more vulnerable to serious illness. This exclusion is likely to have a long-term deleterious impact on their lives unless services are adapted to promote their inclusion.

The Influence of Compositional and Contextual Factors on Non-Receipt of Basic Vaccines among Children of 12-23-Month Old in India: A Multilevel Analysis

PLoS One
[Accessed 13 September 2014]
http://www.plosone.org/

Research Article
The Influence of Compositional and Contextual Factors on Non-Receipt of Basic Vaccines among Children of 12-23-Month Old in India: A Multilevel Analysis
Daouda Sissoko mail, Helen Trottier, Denis Malvy, Mira Johri
Published: September 11, 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0106528
Abstract
Background
Children unreached by vaccination are at higher risk of poor health outcomes and India accounts for nearly a quarter of unvaccinated children worldwide. The objective of this study was to investigate compositional and contextual determinants of non-receipt of childhood vaccines in India using multilevel modelling.
Methods and Findings
We studied characteristics of unvaccinated children using the District Level Health and Facility Survey 3, a nationally representative probability sample containing 65 617 children aged 12–23 months from 34 Indian states and territories. We developed four-level Bayesian binomial regression models to examine the determinants of non-vaccination. The analysis considered two outcomes: completely unvaccinated (CUV) children who had not received any of the eight vaccine doses recommended by India’s Universal Immunization Programme, and children who had not received any dose from routine immunisation services (no RI). The no RI category includes CUV children and those who received only polio doses administered via mass campaigns. Overall, 4.83% (95% CI: 4.62–5.06) of children were CUV while 12.01% (11.68–12.35) had received no RI. Individual compositional factors strongly associated with CUV were: non-receipt of tetanus immunisation for mothers during pregnancy (OR = 3.65 [95% CrI: 3.30–4.02]), poorest household wealth index (OR = 2.44 [1.81–3.22] no maternal schooling (OR = 2.43 [1.41–4.05]) and no paternal schooling (OR = 1.83 [1.30–2.48]). In rural settings, the influence of maternal illiteracy disappeared whereas the role of household wealth index was reinforced. Factors associated with no RI were similar to those for CUV, but effect sizes for individual compositional factors were generally larger. Low maternal education was the strongest risk factor associated with no RI in all models. All multilevel models found significant variability at community, district, and state levels net of compositional factors.
Conclusion
Non-vaccination in India is strongly related to compositional characteristics and is geographically distinct. Tailored strategies are required to overcome current barriers to immunisation.

Justifying the initiation and continued provision of public health interventions in humanitarian settings

Public Health Ethics
Volume 7 Issue 2 July 2014
http://phe.oxfordjournals.org/content/current

Justifying the initiation and continued provision of public health interventions in humanitarian settings
A. M. Viens*
Southampton Law School, University of Southampton and Joint Centre for Bioethics, University of Toronto
Maxwell J. Smith
Joint Centre for Bioethics, University of Toronto and Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto
Cécile M. Bensimon
Joint Centre for Bioethics, University of Toronto
Diego S. Silva
Author Affiliations
Joint Centre for Bioethics, University of Toronto and Centre for Research on Inner City Health, St. Michael’s Hospital
First published online: September 4, 2014
Abstract
Médecins Sans Frontières is not morally required to continue providing the same therapeutic and preventative interventions for lead poisoning in Nigeria in the face of conditions that negatively impact on the achievement of their objectives. Nevertheless, Médecins Sans Frontières may have reasons to revise their objectives and adopt different interventions or methods.

Science – 12 September 2014 – Special Issue: Global Health

Science
12 September 2014 vol 345, issue 6202, pages 1209-1416
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

Special Issue: Global Health
Perspectives
Putting women and girls at the center of development
Melinda French Gates
Science 12 September 2014: 1273-1275.

The state of global health in 2014
Jaime Sepúlveda and Christopher Murray
Science 12 September 2014: 1275-1278.

Getting essential health products to their end users: Subsidize, but how much?
Pascaline Dupas
Science 12 September 2014: 1279-1281.

Models of education in medicine, public health, and engineering
Patricia Garcia, Robert Armstrong, and Muhammad H. Zaman
Science 12 September 2014: 1281-1283.

Prioritizing integrated mHealth strategies for universal health coverage
Garrett Mehl and Alain Labrique
Science 12 September 2014: 1284-1287.

How to transform the practice of engineering to meet global health needs
Deb Niemeier, Harry Gombachika, and Rebecca Richards-Kortum
Science 12 September 2014: 1287-1290.
Abstract
Strengthening the evidence base for health programming in humanitarian crises
A. Ager, G. Burnham, F. Checchi, M. Gayer, R. F. Grais, M. Henkens, M. B. F. Massaquoi,
R. Nandy, C. Navarro-Colorado, and P. Spiegel
Science 12 September 2014: 1290-1292.

Emerging, evolving, and established infectious diseases and interventions
M. Elizabeth Halloran and Ira M. Longini Jr.
Science 12 September 2014: 1292-1294.

Virus sharing, genetic sequencing, and global health security
Lawrence O. Gostin, Alexandra Phelan, Michael A. Stoto, John D. Kraemer, and K. Srinath Reddy
Science 12 September 2014: 1295-1296.

Monitoring parasite diversity for malaria elimination in sub-Saharan Africa
Anita Ghansah, Lucas Amenga-Etego, Alfred Amambua-Ngwa, Ben Andagalu, Tobias Apinjoh,
Marielle Bouyou-Akotet, Victoria Cornelius, Lemu Golassa, Voahangy Hanitriniaina ndrianaranjaka, Deus Ishengoma, Kimberly Johnson, Edwin Kamau, Oumou Maïga-Ascofaré, Dieudonne Mumba, Paulina Tindana, Antoinette Tshefu-Kitoto, Milijaona Randrianarivelojosia,
Yavo William, Dominic P. Kwiatkowski, and Abdoulaye A. Djimde
Science 12 September 2014: 1297-1298.

Antibiotic effectiveness: Balancing conservation against innovation
Ramanan Laxminarayan
Science 12 September 2014: 1299-1301.

Creating a global observatory for health R&D
Robert F. Terry, José F. Salm Jr., Claudia Nannei, and Christopher Dye
Science 12 September 2014: 1302-1304.

 

A global strategy for protecting vulnerable coastal populations

Science
12 September 2014 vol 345, issue 6202, pages 1209-1416
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

Policy Forum
Disaster Management
A global strategy for protecting vulnerable coastal populations
Edward B. Barbier
Author Affiliations
Department of Economics and Finance, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA.

The 2014 Working Group II report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warns that lowlying coastal areas are increasingly exposed to risks from sea-level rise, flooding, and extreme storm events (1). Low-lying coasts of developing countries in particular face two types of vulnerability: (i) a lack of capacity to respond quickly and effectively to natural disasters and (ii) declining protection for people and property as coastal habitats disappear. A science-based global strategy for protecting coastal populations should address both sources of vulnerability, through investments in short-run emergency response and long-term coastal adaptation.

 

Science – Ebola

Science
12 September 2014 vol 345, issue 6202, pages 1209-1416
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

Editorial
Ebola’s perfect storm
Peter Piot
Peter Piot is director and professor of Global Health at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
The devastating Ebola epidemic in West Africa is the result of a perfect storm: dysfunctional health services as the result of decades of war, low public trust in government and Western medicine, traditional beliefs and even denials about the cause or existence of the virus, and burial practices that involve contact with contagious Ebola-infected corpses. There are now five affected West African countries: Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and most recently, Senegal. Ebola has killed around 2000 and infected more than 3500, with over 40% of cases occurring within the past few weeks. The World Health Organization (WHO) predicts that 20,000 may become infected. This fast pace of Ebola’s spread is a grim reminder that epidemics are a global threat and that the only way to get this virus under control is through a rapid response at a massive global scale—much stronger than the current efforts.

In Depth
Infectious Disease
Ebola vaccines racing forward at record pace
Jon Cohen
Experimental Ebola vaccines started human tests last week and beginning in November may be rolled out to as many as 10,000 people in West Africa. The two vaccines being tested first must prove safe and capable of stimulating relevant immune responses in small trials taking place in four countries. No vaccine has ever moved more quickly into widespread use. Many issues remain on how to determine whether the vaccines actually protect people from Ebola. Because the vaccines are in short supply, they also will only be offered to health care workers and other first-line responders. One vaccine is being manufactured by a collaboration between the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and GlaxoSmithKline, and the other is being made by NewLink Genetics.
In Depth

Interview
Ebola: ‘Wow, that is really tough’
Leslie Roberts
The news out of West Africa is grim. By early this week, Ebola cases had topped 4000 and deaths exceeded 2000, and the World Health Organization (WHO) had warned that thousands more should be expected in Liberia alone in the next few weeks. In an interview with Science on 4 September, WHO’s Bruce Aylward, an assistant director-general who is running operations as part of WHO’s new $600 million Ebola emergency plan, talked about why the international community has been slow to respond to the unprecedented epidemic and described the huge gap between the number of cases and the capacity in countries to deal with them. Governments are now keen to help, he says, but are having trouble mobilizing. Relief organizations are used to dealing with wars and natural disasters, not dangerous pathogens, and few have any experience in running the many treatment centers that are required. WHO’s just-released plan calls for stopping the outbreak in 6 to 9 months. That goal is still possible, Aylward says, but only if the international community takes immediate action.

 

Fragile and Conflict-Affected States: Exploring the Relationship Between Governance, Instability and Violence

Stability: International Journal of Security & Development
[accessed 13 September 2014]
http://www.stabilityjournal.org/articles

Fragile and Conflict-Affected States: Exploring the Relationship Between Governance, Instability and Violence
Sebastian AJ Taylor
Abstract
‘Fragile and conflict-affected states’ (FCAS) constitute an increasingly important category of aid policy and action. But the category comprises a large and heterogeneous set of countries, problematizing coherent policy response which is often awkwardly split between boilerplate strategy and case-by-case approach. In both respects, efficiency of aid allocations is questionable. There is a need to disaggregate the category into smaller groups of countries, understood according to a more nuanced interpretation of the nature of their fragility. Disaggregation, however, is challenging insofar as it is hard to find a stable reference point internal to the category by which states’ relative performance – and causes of performance – can be determined. An alternative approach is to seek a reference point external to the entire FCAS category – for example a multilateral initiative – which allows us to explore systematic differences between those who sign up and those who do not. This research took the UN’s Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) initiative as such a mechanism. Splitting FCAS into two groups – those who had joined SUN within its initial two-year phase and those who had not – we reviewed a range of social, economic, political, institutional and conflict/instability indicators to identify areas of significant difference. An unexpected finding was that while SUN-joiners performed statistically better on governance, there was no difference between joiners and non-joiners on the level of instability and violence they suffered, suggesting that some countries, even at high levels of conflict disruption, can achieve areas of relatively good governance.

Links Between Terrorism, Organized Crime and Crime: The Case of the Sahel Region

Stability: International Journal of Security & Development
[accessed 13 September 2014]
http://www.stabilityjournal.org/articles

Links Between Terrorism, Organized Crime and Crime: The Case of the Sahel Region
Erik Alda, Joseph L Sala
Abstract
Many observers hold that terrorist groups and transnational criminal networks share many of the same characteristics, methods and tactics. There are many examples cited to demonstrate these observations are not coincidental, but indicative of a trend: a trend that is a growing threat to the security interests of many nations. We propose that the intersection of criminal networks and terrorist organizations can be broadly grouped into three categories – coexistence (they coincidentally occupy and operate in the same geographic space at the same time), cooperation (they decide that their mutual interests are both served, or at not least severely threatened, by temporarily working together) and convergence (each begins to engage in behavior(s) that is/are more commonly associated with the other). The activities of these types of organizations in the Sahel region of Africa provide examples of all three categories of interactions. This perceived threat has prompted action and policy choices by a number of actors in the sub-region. But this assessment might not be accurate and may, in fact, be an attempt to force an extra-regional, inappropriate paradigm upon a specific situation and set of circumstances where they do not apply.

Healthcare on the Battlefield

Journal of International Humanitarian Legal Studies
Volume 4, Issue 2, pages 197 – 219

Healthcare on the Battlefield
Brigit Toebes1
Abstract
During armed conflicts healthcare workers or medical personnel often work under extremely difficult and dangerous circumstances. In such situations doctors and nurses, hospitals and medical units are at a serious risk of being attacked. Medical personnel also face complex ethical dilemmas when it comes to the treatment of patients from all sides of a conflict. This concerns military medical personnel in particular: as members of the armed forces, they face dilemmas of ‘dual loyalty’ where they may have to choose between the interests of their employer (the military) and the interests of their patients. This contribution looks at these issues from the perspectives of medical ethics, international humanitarian law (ihl), and human rights law (hrl). The article argues that the standards of medical ethics continue to apply during armed conflicts, and that during such situations medical ethics, ihl and hrl are mutually reinforcing. The principle of ‘medical neutrality’ and the human ‘right to health’ are positioned as key norms in this field. The article presents a normative framework for the delivery of health care on the battlefield in the form of a set of commitments for actors involved in the conflict, including the belligerent parties and (military) medical personnel.

Assessment of Role in Non-Governmental Organizations and Their Humanitarian Effort in Refugee Camps Worldwide

European Journal of Social Sciences Education and Research
Vol. 1, Nr. 3, September 2014

[PDF] Assessment of Role in Non-Governmental Organizations and Their Humanitarian Effort in Refugee Camps Worldwide
Festina Balidemaj
University of Minnesota, USA
420 Delaware St SE, Minneapolis, 55455, bali0017@d.umn.edu
Albina Balidemaj
Clemson University, USA
Barre Hall, South Carolina, 29634-0312 abalide@g.clemson.edu
Abstract
The relief and humanitarian effort of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in refugee camps worldwide requires prompt, coordinated, and effective interventions. As evident by the physicians and nurses make up of NGOs, a significant portion of such effort is focused on health care issues such as treating, managing, and preventing the spread of infectious diseases of refugees. In this literature-based project, the role of pharmacists in the relief efforts of NGOs is examined. Currently, pharmacists represent a small fraction (approx 9%) of the non-governmental organizations’ task force, which undermines the invaluable potential of their contributions to the relief efforts. Student pharmacists should also be introduced to the role of non-governmental organizations’ humanitarian efforts and the world of opportunities available in helping people under stress while being exposed to different cultures towards their own professional growth.

Genetic Identification and the Response to Mass Fatalities

New Genetics and Society
Volume 33, Issue 3, 2014
Special Issue: Genetic Identification and the Response to Mass Fatalities

Editorial
Approaching disaster victim identification
Jackie Leach Scully & Robin Williams
pages 233-238
DOI:10.1080/14636778.2014.946988
Published online: 05 Sep 2014

Articles
Who knows who we are? Questioning DNA analysis in disaster victim identification
Caroline Bennett
pages 239-256

Identity, mass fatality and forensic genetics
Robin Williams & Matthias Wienroth
pages 257-276
DOI:10.1080/14636778.2014.946005

Hidden in full sight: kinship, science and the law in the aftermath of the Srebrenica genocide
Erica Haimes & Victor Toom
pages 277-294
DOI:10.1080/14636778.2014.946004
Published online: 05 Sep 2014

Ethical considerations in the use of DNA as a contribution toward the determination of identification in historic cases: considerations from the Western front
Margaret Cox & Peter Jones
pages 295-312
DOI:10.1080/14636778.2014.946987
Published online: 05 Sep 2014

Naming the dead: DNA-based identification of historical remains as an act of care
Jackie Leach Scully
pages 313-332
DOI:10.1080/14636778.2014.946002
Published online: 05 Sep 2014

Death duty – caring for the dead in the context of disaster
Simon Woods
pages 333-347
DOI:10.1080/14636778.2014.944260

Intergenerational Consequences of Early Age Marriages of Girls: Effect on Children’s Human Capital

Journal of Development Studies
Published online: 30 Aug 2014

Intergenerational Consequences of Early Age Marriages of Girls: Effect on Children’s Human Capital
Sheetal Sekhri*a & Sisir Debnathb
DOI: 10.1080/00220388.2014.936397
Abstract
We use nationally representative data from India on test scores in an instrumental variable framework to identify the effects of early age marriages of girls on the human capital of their children. Early age marriages reduce mother’s educational attainment, which can adversely impact the education outcomes of their children. On the other hand, better marriage prospects of young brides may compensate and improve children’s educational outcomes by way of resource provision. Consequently, the effect of early age marriages of girls on their children is theoretically ambiguous and warrants an empirical examination. In our empirical analysis, we use variation in age at menarche to instrument for age at marriage. Our estimates show that a delay of one year in the age at marriage of the mother increases the probability of being able to do the most challenging arithmetic and reading tasks on the administered test by 3.5 percentage points.

Pre-Positioning Disaster Response Facilities and Relief Items

Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal
Accepted author version posted online: 05 Sep 2014

Pre-Positioning Disaster Response Facilities and Relief Items
Çiğdem Renklia* & Serhan Durana
DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2014.957940
ABSTRACT
Large-scale disasters cause enormous damage to people living in the affected areas. Providing relief quickly to the affected is a critical issue in recovering the effects of a disaster. Pre-disaster planning has an important role on reducing the arrival time of relief items to the affected areas and efficiently allocating them. In this study, a mixed integer programming model is proposed in order to pre-position warehouses throughout a potential affected area and determine the amount of relief items to be held in those warehouses. Time between the strike of the disaster and arrival of relief items at the affected areas is aimed to be minimized. In addition, using probabilistic constraints, the model ensures that relief items arrive at affected areas within a certain time window with certain reliability. Considering instable fault lines on which Istanbul is located, the proposed model is applied to the Istanbul case for pre-positioning warehouses a priori to the possible expected large-scale earthquake.

The Sentinel

Human Rights Action :: Humanitarian Response :: Health ::
Holistic Development :: Sustainable Resilience
__________________________________________________
Week ending 6 September 2014

This weekly digest is intended to aggregate and distill key content from a broad spectrum of practice domains and organization types including key agencies/IGOs, NGOs, governments, academic and research institutions, consortiums and collaborations, foundations, and commercial organizations. We also monitor a spectrum of peer-reviewed journals and general media channels. The Sentinel’s geographic scope is global/regional but selected country-level content is included. We recognize that this spectrum/scope yields an indicative and not an exhaustive product. Comments and suggestions should be directed to:

David R. Curry
Editor &
Founding Managing Director
GE2P2 – Center for Governance, Evidence, Ethics, Policy, Practice

pdf: The Sentinel_ week ending 6 September 2014

Comment: What’s missing in the Ebola fight in West Africa: Jim Yong Kim and Paul Farmer By Jim Yong Kim and Paul Farmer

What’s missing in the Ebola fight in West Africa: Jim Yong Kim and Paul Farmer
By Jim Yong Kim and Paul Farmer August 31
Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Jim Yong Kim is president of the World Bank. Paul Farmer is the Kolokotrones University professor at Harvard University. Farmer and Kim, who are infectious disease physicians, co-founded the nonprofit organization Partners in Health.

If the Ebola epidemic devastating the countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone had instead struck Washington, New York or Boston, there is no doubt that the health systems in place could contain and then eliminate the disease.

Hospitals would isolate suspected cases. Health workers would be outfitted with proper protective clothing and equipment. Doctors and nurses would administer effective supportive care, including comprehensive management of dehydration, impaired kidney and liver function, bleeding disorders and electrolyte disturbance. Labs would dispose of hazardous materials properly. And a public health command center would both direct the response and communicate clearly to the public about the outbreak.

Ebola is spread by direct physical contact with infected bodily fluids, making it less transmissible than an airborne disease such as tuberculosis. A functioning health system can stop Ebola transmission and, we believe, save the lives of a majority of those who are afflicted.

So why isn’t this happening in West Africa, where more than 1,500 people have already died?

As international groups pull staff from the three countries, airlines suspend commercial flights and neighboring countries close their borders, some have argued that it will be next to impossible to contain the outbreak — that public health systems are too weak, the cost of providing effective care too high and health workers too scarce

But Ebola has been stopped in every other outbreak to date, and it can be stopped in West Africa, too. The crisis we are watching unfold derives less from the virus itself and more from deadly and misinformed biases that have led to a disastrously inadequate response to the outbreak.

These biases, tragically, live on, despite evidence that disproves them again and again.

Just 15 years ago, Western experts said confidently that there was little that rich countries could do to stop the global AIDS crisis, which was killing millions of people in Africa and elsewhere.

Today, thanks to leadership and advocacy from President George W. Bush, a bipartisan coalition of members in Congress, courageous faith-based organizations and U.S. government researchers such as Tony Fauci and Mark Dybul, more than 10 million Africans are getting life-saving treatment.

The take-no-action argument has been used over the years as an excuse not to mount an effort to control drug-resistant tuberculosis, malaria and many other diseases that afflict primarily the poor.

But the reality is this: The Ebola crisis today is a reflection of long-standing and growing inequalities of access to basic health care. Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone do not have the staff, stuff and systems required to halt the outbreak on their own. According to its ministry of health, before the outbreak Liberia had just 50 doctors working in public health facilities serving a population of 4.3 million.

To halt this epidemic, we need an emergency response that is equal to the challenge. We need international organizations and wealthy countries that possess the required resources and knowledge to step forward and partner with West African governments to mount a serious, coordinated response as laid out in the World Health Organization’s Ebola response roadmap.

Many are dying needlessly. Historically, in the absence of effective care, common acute infections have been characterized by high mortality rates. What’s happening with Ebola in Africa has been no different.

A 1967 outbreak in Germany and Yugoslavia of Marburg hemorrhagic fever — a disease similar to Ebola — had a 23 percent fatality rate. Compare that with an 86 percent rate for cases across sub-Saharan Africa in the years since. The difference is that Germany and Yugoslavia had functioning health systems and the resources to treat patients effectively. The West African countries coping with Ebola today have neither.

With a strong public health response led by the United Nations, the World Health Organization, the United States, Britain, France and other wealthy nations, the virus could be contained and the fatality rate — which, based on the most conservative estimates, exceeds 50 percent in the present outbreak — would drop dramatically, perhaps to below 20 percent.

We are at a dangerous moment in these three West African countries, all fragile states that have had strong economic growth in recent years after decades of wars and poor governance. It would be scandalous to let this crisis escalate further when we have the knowledge, tools and resources to stop it. Tens of thousands of lives, the future of the region and hard-won economic and health gains for millions hang in the balance.

Report: Aid Is Good for the Poor [World Bank, August 2014]

Aid Is Good for the Poor
World Bank
August 2014 WPS6998
Pdf: http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/IW3P/IB/2014/08/05/000158349_20140805102808/Rendered/PDF/WPS6998.pdf
Summary:
Aid is good for the poor. This paper uses detailed aid data spanning 60 developing countries over the past two decades to show that social aid significantly and directly benefits the poorest in society, while economic aid increases the income of the poor through growth. This new and unequivocal finding distinguishes the current study from past studies that only utilized aggregate aid data and returned ambiguous results. The paper also confirms that none of the elements of globalization (trade, foreign direct investment, remittances), policies (government expenditure, inflation management), institutional quality, nor other plausibly pro-poor factors have systematic effects on the poor or any other income group, beyond their effects on average incomes. The paper finds that trade and foreign direct investment tend to benefit the richest segments of society more than other income groups. Therefore, the presented evidence suggests that aid can play a crucial role in enabling the poor to benefit more from globalization. These discoveries underscore the need to assist developing countries to find the mix of economic and social aid that jointly promotes the participation of the poor in the development process under globalization. In this manner, aid can make greater strides in spurring development.

Hidden in Plain Sight: A statistical analysis of violence against children [UNICEF, September 2014]

Hidden in Plain Sight: A statistical analysis of violence against children
UNICEF
September 2014 :: 206 pages ISBN: 978-92-806-4767-9
pdf: http://www.unicef.org/publications/index_74865.html#
This new report from UNICEF presents the latest statistics on violence against children, drawing on data from 190 countries. By examining global patterns of violence as well as attitudes and social
norms, it sheds light on an issue that has remained largely undocumented. Its objective is to use data to make violence against children and its many ramifications more visible, bringing about a fuller understanding of its magnitude and nature and offering clues to its prevention. While intensified efforts are needed to strengthen the availability of reliable and comprehensive data on the issue, the findings presented here are a clear call for action.

Ending Violence Against Children: Six Strategies for Action
UNICEF
September 2014 :: 68 pages :: ISBN: 978-92-806-4768-6
pdf: http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/Ending_Violence_Against_Children_Six_strategies_for_action_EN_2_Sept_2014.pdf
This companion publication provides evidence of effective programmes to address violence against children drawn from UNICEF’s decades of experience, and informed by key partners. Case studies from around the globe illustrate how well-crafted prevention and response strategies can reduce the prevalence and impact of violence against children. The report is released as part of the #ENDviolence global initiative calling for an end to all forms of violence against children. It is directed at government leaders, civil society representatives, the private sector and the international development community

New guidelines for industry on protecting children online [ITU, UNICEF]

New guidelines for industry on protecting children online
Joint initiative by the International Telecommunication Union and UNICEF
Media Release
Excerpt
GENEVA, 5 September 2014 – The International Telecommunication Union (ITU), UNICEF and partners of the Child Online Protection Initiative, released updated guidelines to strengthen online protection for children…
…The Guidelines for Industry on Child Online Protection provide advice on how the ICT industry can help promote safety for children using the Internet or any technologies or devices that can connect to it, as well as guidance on how to enable responsible digital citizenship, learning and civic participation. The updated version provides guidance specifically aimed at companies that develop, provide or make use of information and communication technologies…
…The Guidelines call for a comprehensive response to the online risks facing children and partnerships across multiple stakeholder groups, including governments, companies, civil society, parents and educators…The Guidelines provide a framework for company action on children’s online safety, so we appreciated the opportunity to contribute our expertise to their development…
…The Guidelines were developed in alignment with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and the Children’s Rights and Business Principles. They can be accessed online at www.itu.int/en/cop/Pages/guidelines.aspx

Statement – UNFPA: The path forward [05 September 2014]

UNFPA United Nations Population Fund [to 6 September 2014]
http://www.unfpa.org/public/

05 September 2014 – Statement
UNFPA: The path forward
Statement by the Executive Director at the Second Regular Session of the Executive Board
We also know that in order to make progress, in order to advance a universal sustainable development agenda beyond 2015, we must work towards a common understanding of the universality of human rights. Development can only succeed when human rights are respected.

$1.9 billion pledged in sustainable development partnerships [DESA]

DESA United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs [to 6 September 2014]
http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/news.html

$1.9 billion pledged in sustainable development partnerships
4 September 2014, Apia, Samoa
Nearly 300 partnerships between governments, businesses and civil society organizations from all over the world have been registered to support small island developing states bringing the total value of these commitments to over USD $1.9 billion, the United Nations announced today at the conclusion of the Third International Conference on Small Island Developing States.