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SOUTH AFRICA: Fight Sexism to Help Young Mothers
By Mandisi Majavu
CAPE TOWN - "My mother was surprised that my breasts were getting bigger, and told me to go to the clinic to take a pregnancy test. The nurses told me I was pregnant and so I cried. I cried because I thought I was too young to have a baby and I thought I wouldn't manage."
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SOUTH AFRICA: Young, Educated and Unemployed
By Miriam Mannak
CAPE TOWN - Unemployment among young South Africans is hovering at 30 percent, shooting up to over 60 percent for youths in their late teens and early twenties. But tertiary education and skills development seem not to be making much of a dent in what is now regarded as a crisis.
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DEVELOPMENT-ZIMBABWE: Investor Absence Fuels Retrenchments
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - Forty-year-old Thelma Dube was this month told by her long-time employer to stay home. She will be called back to work when business picks up. Her husband got the same instruction, as did hundreds of other workers at the company Textile Mills in Zimbabwe’s second largest city.
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URUGUAY: Rural Schools Threatened by Emptying Countryside
By Dino Cappelli
SARANDÍ GRANDE, Uruguay - Cono Perdigón rides a bus that bounces its way down a dusty, pitted road to reach the rural schoolhouse where he teaches.
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PARAGUAY: University Opens Doors to Native Students
By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCIÓN - Video camera in hand, Isidro Romero is getting ready for another day of classes in the Paraguayan capital. He is studying Communications as part of a programme aimed at breaking down the barriers that have blocked access to university level studies by the country’s small indigenous minority.
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RIGHTS-INDIA: Shades of Abu Ghraib in College Ragging Rituals
By Ranjit Devraj
NEW DELHI - As the annual scrimmage for coveted seats in India’s engineering and medical colleges gets underway, what many students dread is the sadistic ritual of ragging - or hazing - that they expect to undergo at the hands of their seniors.
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EDUCATION-AFRICA: The Other Crisis
By Mandisi Majavu
CAPE TOWN - The World Economic Forum on Africa has just concluded in Cape Town. If government leaders and captains of industry called for an eight trillion dollar bailout for the continent’s beleaguered education system - like the one found for the world’s biggest bankers - it went unreported.
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HAITI: Student Protests Rock State University
By Sylvestre Fils Dorcilus*
PORT AU PRINCE - The National University of Haiti (UEH) has been gripped by crisis for the last two months, operating under the constant threat of student strikes staged to demand reinstatement of cancelled courses and an increase in the minimum wage.
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DEVELOPMENT: UNESCO Race Wide Open
By Alecia D. McKenzie
PARIS - The contest for a new UNESCO director-general is now wide open with the addition of last-minute nominees for the post, following the controversy around leading contender Farouk Hosny.
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LATIN AMERICA: "Sexuality Is an Essential Part of Humanity"
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - In an effort to promote the free enjoyment of human sexuality, separate from reproduction, the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) launched the world's first declaration of sexual rights in the Argentine capital on Wednesday.
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Q&A: "Indigenous Women Are Growing in Numbers and Influence"
Shari Nijman interviews CHRISTA WILLIAMS, executive director of First Nations Public Service
UNITED NATIONS - The Canadian province of British Columbia is home to more than 200 native communities, or First Nations, ranging from about 20 people to over 3,000. As their size and level of remoteness varies, so does their economic development.
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Education is the second of the Millennium Development Goals, which include ensuring that all children complete primary schooling. The average primary completion rate has risen from 62 percent to 72 percent, but even at this pace Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia may not reach the MDG target. In spite of this, through education women are improving their chances in many societies: in 2004 girls outnumbered boys at secondary schools in 84 of 171 countries, according to the 2007 World Development Indicators published by the World Bank. At the university level, women do better still, outnumbering men in 83 of 141 countries. Reduction of child mortality rates is associated with education and gender. The bottom line is that education is a boon to development.

Education Graphs - Click to Enlarge
Millennium Development Goals
Children Under Siege
News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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2007 World Development Indicators
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