Brief reactive psychoses are of interest because some behaviors, otherwise considered normal in developing countries, overlap. |
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They balance the books by selling places to students from developing countries. |
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Many developing countries have an absolute advantage in the price of unskilled labor. |
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In principle this meant developing countries should have the right to have access to cheap generic drugs. |
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In the architecture of developing countries, structures grow with an organic responsiveness of form to function. |
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The risk for foodborne and waterborne infections among immunosuppressed, HIV-infected persons is magnified during travel to developing countries. |
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From early on, therefore, the developing countries worried they would be railroaded into a last-minute deal. |
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He notes that in developing countries the rates are rising too and in particular among the affluent who have adopted westernised lifestyles. |
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Writing off the debt of developing countries is not just a moral but also a legal obligation. |
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There is an emerging tendency toward unethical practices that adversely affect scholars from developing countries. |
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The trade protectionism for developing countries that Make Poverty History recommends is a rat trap of gigantic proportions for the world's poor. |
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There are some movements afoot, seeking to protect the resources which are left and reallocate resources to developing countries in need. |
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So the developing countries, the main beneficiaries of US largesse, are digging in against other UN reforms unless they get the extra cash. |
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Will regression afflict the developing countries as aging weakens the industrial world? |
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Human amnion has been suggested for use as a biologic burn dressing, especially in developing countries. |
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And leaded petrol is still used in a lot of developing countries, despite everything we know about its negative health effects. |
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Academic staff at overseas universities tend to be more lenient towards guest students from developing countries. |
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The IMF and World Bank have been advocating financial liberalisation for developing countries. |
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Television, unlike radio, more often uses satellites, with most developing countries allowing the reception of satellite transmissions. |
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Globalization and localization enhance the prospects for rapid and sustainable growth in developing countries. |
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Economists say slab should be made in low-cost developing countries, close to a secure supply of raw materials. |
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This is exactly what they've done on a macro level to the developing countries of the world. |
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The disease is common in developing countries lacking adequate sewage and sanitation facilities. |
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And while some subprime borrowers were duped by complicated loan terms, financial literacy is even worse in developing countries. |
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The developing countries began to copy and re-create aspects of the developed countries' economies. |
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Many nations around the world, particularly developing countries, have taken advantage of the benefits of medical tourism. |
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It takes apart the components and melts them down or refurbishes newer models and sells them on to developing countries. |
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There is no longer any mystery as to why so much economic activity in developing countries is in the informal sector. |
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Evasion and escape to the informal sector are big problems in many countries, especially developing countries. |
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Throughout the world, especially in the developing countries, donkeys work as beasts of burden. |
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It doesn't just lend money, it helps developing countries become tomorrow's markets. |
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But NHS officials insist that developing countries are not being drained of nurses. |
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In developing countries, pedestrians, cyclists, and passengers in minibuses and buses frequently belong to lower socioeconomic groups. |
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For our non-UK readers, this is an biennial charity event set up by leading comedians to provide funds for developing countries. |
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Shareholders also questioned investments in mobile players in developing countries. |
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Unfortunately developing countries lagged behind, with drugs becoming politicized and easy moneymakers by immoral officials. |
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Let's talk more generally about multinationals operating in developing countries. |
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How can the problem with unequal distribution of wealth be solved without developing countries destroying their natural resource basis? |
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For developing countries, currency crises are an important subset of financial crises. |
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Nearly all children in developing countries are infected with the bacterium due to unsanitary living conditions. |
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A feature of natural disasters in developing countries is that the magnitude of the disaster seems to be amplified. |
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Many developing countries may lack the resources necessary to prevent such outbreaks. |
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Internationally, social capital has become central to development activities in developing countries. |
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More than one half of Western Europe is already urbanized and there is massive urbanizing elsewhere, particularly in the developing countries. |
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We must also remember that the potential damage to more southerly developing countries could include devastating flooding and desertification. |
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Many of the world's developing countries were formerly under the sovereignty of a colonial power. |
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Non-communicable disease amongst adults, such as cardiovascular disease and lung cancer, is also becoming more prominent in developing countries. |
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First, the domestic production of food staples in developing countries was disrupted. |
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Three, strengthening plant breeding programmes in developing countries for not only bananas but also other basic staple crops. |
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Scientists in developing countries are terribly handicapped in both generation and sharing. |
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They want developing countries to cut their bounded tariff steeply and to bound the tariff of all products. |
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Given the huge disparities existing across the world it is open to question whether IP harmonization benefits developing countries. |
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I found myself reading again passages that reminded me of just how unaware and insensitive I am to health concerns in developing countries. |
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Like other developing countries, Bangladesh catapulted into the global economy on the back of its cheap, plentiful labour force. |
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A lot of companies outsource their programming work into developing countries. |
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To lower labor and environmental costs, major companies in the West outsource manufacturing work to developing countries. |
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There is one overarching positive message for developing countries from the genome project. |
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I do not believe the imposition of high subscription prices helps subsidise access for people in developing countries. |
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The subsidized production and export of U.S. food surpluses to developing countries is a major cause of hunger. |
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It is impossible to judge to what extent remaining motor vehicle tariffs restrict imports and market penetration from developing countries. |
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Privatization, in both developed and developing countries, is producing mixed results whose long-term implications are not yet clear. |
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The pharmaceutical industry has little incentive to develop new drugs for use primarily in developing countries. |
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What advantages can there be for the farmers of developing countries to make their phytogenetic heritage available to the rest of humanity? |
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In some countries, especially developing countries, certain diseases are common among the people. |
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In effect these new finances represent the inducement required to persuade developing countries to conserve their genetic resources. |
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We have industrialised countries have access to global markets, and developing countries don't have access to global markets. |
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It is a disease of overcrowding, insanitary conditions and poor personal hygiene, and affects mostly children of developing countries. |
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In developing countries, nearly 60 per cent of the people who confess to committing crimes are innocent, as they do so to escape torture. |
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Malaria, filariasis, and dengue fever are the three major causes of morbidity and mortality in developing countries. |
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This new economy requires that economies of developing countries be integrated into world trade and their enterprises become competitive. |
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There is nothing more distasteful than backpackers landing in developing countries and pleading poverty. |
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In developing countries, children serve as one of the major contributors to family income. |
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Its volunteer cooperants are currently working in more than 20 developing countries. |
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The talks follow the unveiling last Friday of the G20 group of developing countries ' long-awaited counter-proposal on agricultural tariffs. |
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Many developing countries have grown disenchanted with the free-market model in recent years. |
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The authors estimate a cross-sectional wage equation for a set of developing countries for the 1973-1990 period. |
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So much for all those well-intentioned statements in recent weeks about aid to poverty-stricken developing countries. |
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This situation keeps poor farmers in developing countries poverty-stricken. |
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Nevertheless, foreign influences upon traditional normative structures in developing countries gained ground with increasing momentum. |
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If oil prices remain high, then it will probably be developing countries who will suffer the most economic damage. |
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It is unlikely that the EU will press that position in the trade talks, given the delicate state of negotiations with developing countries. |
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The result is that local producers in developing countries are driven out of business, with a catastrophic loss of jobs and income for the poor. |
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Jenny first became interested in dentistry in developing countries when she was a student. |
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At present, the vast majority of gold farming takes place in developing countries. |
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At the same time, the two companies plan a strategic alliance in developing countries. |
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Is it only the poor developing countries which should be adopting such priorities? |
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So what can we do to help developing countries in a way that is not condescending and hypocritical? |
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One of the aims of the Doha trade round was to provide more benefits to developing countries. |
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The underprivileged are in the European countries and in the developing countries. |
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Cheap oil is also in the interest of developing countries, except for those which are oil exporters. |
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Nor is it unusual for rapidly developing countries to experience economic problems. |
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That's why so many developing countries are competing fiercely to attract their investment. |
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The World Bank, founded in 1944, lends money and makes grants to developing countries around the world. |
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Throughout the postwar era, desperate and disenfranchised young people in developing countries sought solace in communism. |
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More than a decade of inflation and disinflation followed in the major developed countries and many developing countries. |
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In the developing countries of Asia, the elderly are consistently and disproportionately among the poorest of the poor. |
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In developing countries on high growth trajectories, household savings may be diverted into productive investment. |
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I mention that eighty percent of epileptics in developing countries, where the stigma is worst, have no access to medication. |
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Moreover, particularly in developing countries, the use of personal computers had yet to be adapted to a legal domain. |
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The impact of these requirements was immediately felt in developing countries for which fishery products are an important export. |
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The other is an initiative to boost the export of renewable energy technologies to developing countries. |
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When implemented well, telemedicine may allow developing countries to leapfrog over their developed neighbours in successful health care delivery. |
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Further, the developing countries did not want environmental issues to unduly detract them from the primary task of development and eradication of poverty. |
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Another benefit touted for developing countries is the potential of so-called m-commerce or the ability to buy goods and services using a mobile phone. |
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But the gap between rich and poor countries still remains large and many critics say that free trade policies are benefitting western nations more than developing countries. |
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She got a job with VSO, sending doctors and nurses all over the world and went on to do a master's degree in social policy in developing countries. |
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But child labour is still a harsh reality in a few organised industries and almost in all unorganised informal industries in the developing countries. |
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Better preventive and prophylactic strategies will be needed until newer antibiotics become available and the sanitation and hygiene in developing countries improve. |
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Critics of marriage agencies say they exploit the grinding poverty of women in developing countries, offering dreams of a new life in the West that often turn sour. |
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Across the world many people in developing countries use unvented stoves for their domestic cooking that burn smoky coal or wood and produce high levels of indoor pollution. |
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An especially hardy plant, the chickling pea historically has served as an inexpensive survival food for the poor of certain developing countries. |
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Yet slowly but surely, cancer, already the second highest cause of mortality in affluent nations, is becoming a priority health problem in developing countries. |
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The argument is boilerplate Al Qaeda, but many people in developing countries, Muslims and non-Muslims alike, find it persuasive. |
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In the developing countries this is normally the result of poor diet, often combined with blood loss due to parasitic infection, particularly hookworm. |
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The rest of the time, he indulged his considerable wanderlust and his genuine urge to help people through various medical sojourns, long and short, in developing countries. |
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As incomes increase in developing countries, electrification, appliance ownership, and the demand for electricity would increase at a relatively rapid rate. |
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It said that while making allowance for special and differential treatment for developing countries, moves should be initiated to eliminate all trade distorting subsidies. |
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Along with the US, it could become a monopoly consumer of services and even repatriate revenue that doctors in developing countries earned from treating local patients. |
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Most energy will be produced locally from wind, solar cells, hydropower, biomass and geothermal sources, offering new grassroots potential for developing countries. |
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In developing countries, a zombie bank's first line of defense against a silent run is usually to arrange loans from relatively well-informed foreign banks. |
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It is doubtful that the knowledge revolution will let developing countries leapfrog to higher levels of development, as many technologists and Internet evangelists assert. |
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Apart from anything else, protectionism would be ruinous to developing countries. |
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They are benefiting from the education provided by developing countries. |
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Secretory diarrhoea is a common disorder in developing countries, where pathogens that produce enterotoxin such as enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli are endemic. |
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River floods are respecters of neither wealth nor status, and both developed and developing countries have been severely afflicted in recent years, across every continent. |
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For developing economies, much of the emphasis is on increasing assistance to those developing countries that pursue constructive growth policies. |
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Many non-communicable chronic diseases also are increasing in developing countries as rapid improvements in health and longevity have changed the burden of illness. |
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Many of them learned important theoretical and practical lessons from antiglobalization struggles in developing countries, particularly from Mexico's Zapatista rebellion. |
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The report points out there are at least 1.5 million skilled expatriates from developing countries employed in western Europe, the United States, Australia and Japan. |
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He never directed another seminar on public administration in developing countries or wrote another book on public policy. |
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Yet, while onchocerciasis eradication is a success and children born in the 1990s have no risk of river blindness, malaria is still a problem in developing countries. |
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In developing countries gut skins dominate the sausage market. |
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Since bananas are a staple crop and a major export in developing countries, Black Sigatoka is placing a heavy toll on their food security and export economies. |
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Despite the fact that the two institutions spend most of their time advising, lending to and dictating to developing countries, the rest of the world does not get a look-in. |
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In developing countries, poisons consumed are commonly toxins such as organophosphorus compounds and aluminium phosphide, and thus mortality is high. |
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When I was 14, I discovered a club at school called Operation Smile, an organization that sponsors free surgery for facially deformed kids in developing countries. |
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I have found that people in developing countries do not take their medical care for granted and really appreciate the care that we give to their children. |
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There's a real need to push much further, most importantly on fair trade, to enable developing countries to actually develop and become independent of aid. |
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About two billion people living in developing countries still rely on wood, charcoal and dung for cooking, heat and light, according to UN figures. |
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It was not just the developing countries with their large populations and lack of adequate sanitation that wanted a solution to the problem of malaria. |
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Acute and catatonic forms of the illness were more prevalent in developing countries, whereas hebephrenic and chronic forms were more frequently seen in developed countries. |
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While Western governments appear to be giving large sums of money in aid to developing countries, the aid is cancelled out by the massive debts these countries owe. |
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After first realising the export possibilities while on a trade mission to Kuala Lumpur, Scrimgour made a concerted effort to discover new markets in developing countries. |
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Perhaps the present conception is less pretentious in terms of the impacts that telecentres can have single-handedly on the inequalities of developing countries. |
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In developing countries, vitamin deficiencies cause an appalling array of diseases, such as beriberi or blindness, from vitamin A deficiency. |
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Sickle cell disease is a haemoglobinopathy responsible for high morbidity and mortality among neonates in developing countries. |
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Fasciola hepatica, a liver fluke, is observed in areas of sheep farming and is common in developing countries. |
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In Cancun, the developing countries said they were no longer prepared to play the game with loaded dice. |
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On the issue of finance, developing countries including India, appeared to be making concessions to the rich countries. |
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Exchange of resistance determinants between salmonellae and nosocomial enterobacteria seems to be frequent, at least in developing countries. |
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The high TB incidence in the Western Cape and the increasing emergence of IBD in SA and other developing countries pose management challenges. |
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Exceptions to the MFN principle also allow for preferential treatment of developing countries, regional free trade areas and customs unions. |
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Some developing countries that had seen strong economic growth saw significant slowdowns. |
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At the same time, however, the EU remains the world's biggest importer of farm products from developing countries. |
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This is further encouraged by a preferential market access agreement for products from developing countries. |
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The financial crisis did not affect developing countries to a great extent. |
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Two researchers claim that global income inequality is decreasing, due to strong economic growth in developing countries. |
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In many poor and developing countries much land and housing is held outside the formal or legal property ownership registration system. |
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Most scholars agree that it better reflects today's reality, particularly new price levels in developing countries. |
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The basic needs approach is one of the major approaches to the measurement of absolute poverty in developing countries. |
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This is especially true in developing countries, such as Honduras, but is also an issue for many developed countries worldwide. |
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Since 1995, trillions of dollars have been transferred from OECD and developing countries into tax havens using these schemes. |
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While United Methodist Church in America membership has been declining, associated groups in developing countries are growing rapidly. |
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In 1974, the fund's lending mandate was expanded to include all developing countries in the world. |
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Outsourcing is among some of the many reasons for increased competition within developing countries. |
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The term Third World is still largely used interchangeably with the least developed countries, the Global South and developing countries. |
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In recent decades there has been a growth in academic publishing in developing countries as they become more advanced in science and technology. |
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Groups at risk for zinc deficiency include the elderly, children in developing countries, and those with renal dysfunction. |
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In developing countries, avoid eating cut fresh fruits and vegetables, salads, and nonpeelable fruits and vegetables. |
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The rapid growth of world population since 1950 has occurred mostly in developing countries. |
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In developing countries, providing access to markets has encouraged farmers to invest in livestock, with the result being improved livelihoods. |
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The Solidaridad informed large audiences of the mistreatment of coffee producers and poor living conditions in developing countries. |
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Rates of smoking have leveled off or declined in the developed world but continue to rise in developing countries. |
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In the 20th century, the falls in death rates in developing countries tended to be substantially faster. |
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Directly or indirectly, the livelihood of over 500 million people in developing countries depends on fisheries and aquaculture. |
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In some developing countries, large numbers of poor people are dependent on fishing. |
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Nevertheless, since the second half of the 20th century an increasing number of people in developing countries have engaged in this activity. |
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He envisioned it as a radio for use by poor people in developing countries without access to batteries. |
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In many developing countries where economies are growing, the growth is often erratic and based on a small number of industries. |
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Most of the urban poor in developing countries unable to find work, can spend their lives in insecure, poorly paid jobs. |
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By the year 2010, CFCs should have been completely eliminated from developing countries as well. |
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The report estimated between 7,000 and 14,000 tonnes of CFCs are smuggled annually into developing countries. |
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Much of this growth is happening in developing countries in Asia, with much smaller amounts of growth in Africa. |
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Fisheries and aquaculture provide direct and indirect employment to over 500 million people in developing countries. |
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In many developing countries, the official age prescriptions stand as mere guidelines. |
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Globalization gave support to the world music phenomenon by allowing music from developing countries to reach broader audiences. |
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Less educated workers, who were more likely to compete with immigrants and workers in developing countries, tended to be opponents. |
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Many in developing countries see globalization as a positive force that lifts them out of poverty. |
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An IMF study noted a potential for skills to be transferred back to developing countries as wages in those a countries rise. |
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Sri Lanka claims a democratic tradition matched by few other developing countries. |
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Cattle remain broadly used as draft animals in many developing countries, such as India. |
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Especially in developing countries, such flocks may be a part of subsistence agriculture rather than a system of trade. |
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Rates of smoking continue to rise in developing countries, but have leveled off or declined in developed countries. |
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However, many farmers in developing countries receive a low price for their produce, or find it difficult to compete with developed countries. |
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There are more second trimester abortions in developing countries such as China, India and Vietnam than in developed countries. |
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Against this backdrop it is important that development agencies create grounds for effective support for a free press in developing countries. |
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Talks have been hung over a divide between the rich developed countries, represented by the G20, and the major developing countries. |
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Rising incomes in developing countries also was a factor in the growing potash and fertilizer use. |
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Others further argue that due to lack of food availability coupled with excessive pollution, developing countries show more evidence of the trap. |
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In developing countries, with high poverty and poor schooling opportunities, child labour is still prevalent. |
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With increased smoking in developing countries, the rates are expected to increase in the next few years, notably in China and India. |
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Air pollution is also emerging as a risk factor for stroke, particularly in developing countries where pollutant levels are highest. |
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For example, most economic textbooks cost more in the United States than in developing countries like Ethiopia. |
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The Davos Forum is held annually to discuss economic problems and development between industrialized and developing countries. |
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Unfortunately 80 per cent of these blind live in the developing countries where resources are limited, said ophthalmologist Prof Shad Muhammad. |
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Paracoccidioidomycosis is another important fungal cause of Addison's disease, especially in Brazil and other developing countries. |
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The drug deal reached among the countries appeared to be a temporary relief to the developing countries. |
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Most industrialized countries and many developing countries operate some form of publicly funded health care with universal coverage as the goal. |
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Pakistani society like other developing countries is a consumption oriented society, having a high marginal propensity to consume. |
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Bangladesh asserted itself in regards to many international issues, including those affecting decolonized and developing countries. |
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One example of competition for skilled labour is active recruitment of health workers from developing countries by developed countries. |
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Additionally dogs are sent to foreign racetracks such as Spain and sometimes in developing countries. |
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In developing countries, motorcycles are overwhelmingly utilitarian due to lower prices and greater fuel economy. |
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The country's economy, as in many other developing countries, is heavily dependent on agriculture. |
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From 2007 to 2010, the first category was referred to as developed countries, and the last three are all grouped in developing countries. |
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China has supported the stronger representation of developing countries and firmly opposed Japan's membership. |
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The OECD has been criticised by several civil society groups and developing countries. |
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J has been included on team trips to developing countries to correct problems such as polydactyly, cleft palates, burn scars and various other problems here and abroad. |
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The package also includes a more detailed understanding of the terms under which India and other developing countries may pursue food stockholding programs. |
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Addressing on the occasion, Public Intellectual Property Resource for Agriculture Executive Director Alan B Bennett said developing countries need better technology. |
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Some studies of prostitution in urban settings in developing countries, such as Kenya, have stated that prostitution acts as a reservoir of STDs within the general population. |
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Much work in nonindustrialized sectors in developing countries is organized in workshops or family-owned businesses, not in large-scale, impersonal factories. |
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Many developing countries maintain other kinds of regimes of managed exchange rates, in spite of facing serious market pressures to let their exchange rates float. |
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Lung cancer rates are currently lower in developing countries. |
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Peter Timmer, Professor Emeritus at Harvard University, reflects on the conditions of possibility of structural transformation in developing countries, particularly in Africa. |
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The emergence of the small-scale manufacturing sector and its growing importance in the economy is a phenomenon common to most developing countries. |
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In the early 1970s he developed a soft, flexible cannula for manual vacuum aspiration that was widely used in the US and developing countries to perform early abortions. |
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Widely treatable diseases in the developed countries of the First World, malaria and tuberculosis needlessly claim many lives in the developing countries of the Third World. |
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It must be the propellent engine of balanced, proportionate and coordinated progress of economic, social and cultural situations in particularly developing countries. |
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The future will see presidia in developing countries, where biodiversity is more threatened and where there's a need for an eco-compatible model of agriculture. |
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Under developing countries per capita consumption, of paper and paper board was 163 KG recorded highest in Taiwan Province and lowest aa 1 KG in Vietnam. |
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To participate in this new global economy, developing countries must be seen as attractive offshore production bases for multinational corporations. |
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For example, developing countries rely little on broad-based taxes, and make substantial use of tariffs and seignorage as nontax sources of revenue. |
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Tuberculosis is the leading cause of hemoptysis in developing countries. |
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In Brazil, as in other developing countries, appointed bureaucrats are encouraged to advance the particular interests of their appointers as opposed to fostering agency goals. |
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Put bluntly, multinational companies possess a variety of factors that developing countries must have if they are to participate in the global economy. |
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Liquified under pressure slightly above atmospheric, it is best known for powering cigarette lighters, but it is also a main fuel source for many developing countries. |
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The Napoleonic Code influenced developing countries outside Europe, especially in the Middle East, attempting to modernize their countries through legal reforms. |
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It is our intention to continue to augment our development cooperation initiatives with developing countries in general and Least Developed Countries in particular. |
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The Doha round of World Trade Organization negotiations aimed to lower barriers to trade around the world, with a focus on making trade fairer for developing countries. |
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Many cyanide spills from gold mines have occurred in both developed and developing countries which killed aquatic life in long stretches of affected rivers. |
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Remittances are a large share of the GDP of many developing countries. |
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Several developing countries are characterized by rapid urbanization, macrocephalic urban systems, high urban densities and various socio economic and environmental problems. |
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It is present in 127 countries, running charity shops, operating shelters for the homeless and disaster relief and humanitarian aid to developing countries. |
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The period also saw an increased immigration of unskilled labor from developing countries, especially Pakistan, although regulations from 1975 slowed this significantly. |
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However, the Arrangement was not negative for all developing countries. |
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Because national resources are often scarce, most developing countries must rely on international donors for a great deal of the funding for compensation programs. |
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From around 1980 through at least 2011, the GDP gap, while still wide, appeared to be closing and, in some more rapidly developing countries, life expectancies began to rise. |
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In developing countries, weanlings are most at risk of malnutrition. |
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Tobacco smoking is the most popular form, being practiced by over one billion people globally, of whom the majority are in the developing countries. |
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The WTO is attempting to complete negotiations on the Doha Development Round, which was launched in 2001 with an explicit focus on developing countries. |
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Shared democratic values ease relations with Western and European countries while similar economic concerns help in relations with other developing countries. |
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The paper attempts to examine the successful cases where agricultural mitigation of and adaption to climate change have worked in the developing countries. |
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Many developing countries are highly dependent on agriculture. |
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As such, the subsidies in the CAP are charged with preventing developing countries from exporting agricultural produce to the EU on a level playing field. |
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Nonetheless, developing countries will be disappointed that the opportunity was not taken in this reform to set a final date for the ending of export subsidies. |
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Many oxen are used worldwide, especially in developing countries. |
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Concerns have often been raised over the buying public's moral complicity in purchasing products assembled or otherwise manufactured in developing countries with child labour. |
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The singer will jet to Ethiopia to visit the slums of Addis Abeba and rural villages in a bid to raise awareness for the need of clean water in developing countries. |
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Empirically, however, sovereign borrowing in developing countries is procyclical, since developing countries have more difficulty accessing capital markets in lean times. |
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Not all developing countries have been affected to the same extent. |
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Water pollution causes approximately 14,000 deaths per day, mostly due to contamination of drinking water by untreated sewage in developing countries. |
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However, while smoking prevalence has declined in many developed countries, it remains high in others and is increasing among women and in developing countries. |
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Cotton continues to be picked by hand in developing countries. |
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In his book The White Man's Burden, the economist William Easterly created two broad categories for those who intervene in the problems afflicting developing countries. |
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The World Health Organization, UNICEF, Project Peanut Butter, and Doctors Without Borders have used these products to help save malnourished children in developing countries. |
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The abortion rate worldwide was 28 per 1000 women, though it was 24 per 1000 women for developed countries and 29 per 1000 women for developing countries. |
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Some remain relatively unchanged, ranging from uncontacted peoples, to poor areas of developing countries, to some cultures that choose to retain a traditional economy. |
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Towards the end of the last century, growth of steel production was in the developing countries such as China, Brazil and India, as well as newly developed South Korea. |
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