Humanitarian News Archive SearchFarewell Food Aid Management: 15 Years of Service to PVOs – pdf.usaid.gov1st November 2003Charity set for mercy flight to Monrovia – Kent Online8th August 2003Malawi Riots Over U.S. Arrests – CBS News25th June 2003Wales | School jumper journeys to Iraq – BBC1st April 2003Interview with Mike Aaronson of Save the Children UK – The New Humanitarian13th March 2003Flooding worsens recovery prospects – The New Humanitarian3rd March 2003NGO-Pentagon Collaboration? The International Rescue Committee, World Vision, Save the Children, the International Medical Corps, and Mercy Corps Have Received $2 Million From the US – Democracy Now!5th February 2003Princess Anne ends visit, deplores lack of health care – The New Humanitarian11th October 2002Southern Africa 'on brink of famine' – BBC21st May 2002Oxfam mixes business with charity28th March 2002 — Imagine a retailer that gets its stock for free, earning a 100% mark-up on everything it sells. The retailer doesn't pay most of its staff, and gets a hefty discount on commercial rates. Oh, and its ...AFRICA | African refugees condemn sex abuses – BBC28th February 2002Reports that child refugees sexually exploited shock Annan – The New Humanitarian27th February 2002AFRICA | Child refugee sex scandal – BBC26th February 2002AFRICA | Fresh rebel attack in Liberia – BBC29th November 2001AFRICA | Mali's children in chocolate slavery – BBC12th April 2001AFRICA | Mali's children in slavery – BBC29th September 2000AFRICA | Mozambique aid 'too slow' – BBC1st March 2000Enterprise Development Evaluation Synthesis (ev618) – GOV.UK1st December 1998Country Profile – New Internationalist5th November 1995rye/# ' – pdf.usaid.gov9th September 1991« Previous1…911912913914Next »
NGO-Pentagon Collaboration? The International Rescue Committee, World Vision, Save the Children, the International Medical Corps, and Mercy Corps Have Received $2 Million From the US – Democracy Now!5th February 2003
Oxfam mixes business with charity28th March 2002 — Imagine a retailer that gets its stock for free, earning a 100% mark-up on everything it sells. The retailer doesn't pay most of its staff, and gets a hefty discount on commercial rates. Oh, and its ...