 | | About the Auhor |
 | | 1. The causes of hunger and malnutrition: macro and micro determinants |
 | | 2. Technical, ethical and ideological responsibilities in nutrition |
 | | 3. De-Westernizing health planning and health care delivery: a political perspective1 |
 | | 4. BOOK REVIEW: Susan George. A Fate Worse Than Debt: A radical new analysis of the Third World debt crisis (Or, the world financial crisis and the poor) |
 | | 5. Viewpoint - Ethics, Ideology and Nutrition |
 | | 6. Ethics and ideology in the battle against malnutrition |
 | | 7. The challenge of feeding the people: Chile under Allende and Tanzania under Nyerere |
 | | 8. The role of Health and Nutrition in development (Le rôle de la santé et de la nutrition dans le développement) (El papel de la salud y la nutrición en el desarrollo) |
 | | 9. Multidisciplinarity, paradigms and ideology in development work |
 | | 10. Survey on attitudes to nutrition planning |
 | | 11. "Household purchasing-power deficit" a more operational indicator to express malnutrition |
 | | 12. Foreign aid and its role in maintaining the exploitation of the agricultural sector: evidence from a case study in Africa |
 | | 13. Low school malnutrition or cultural deprivation? |
 | | 14. Hunger and malnutrition: outlook for changes in the Third World* |
 | | 15. Viewpoint: nutrition planning - what relevance to hunger? |
 | | 16. Rosalia |
 | | 17. The political economy of ill health and malnutrition. |
 | | 18. Commentary the markets of hunger: questioning food aid (non-emergency/long-term) |
 | | 19. Activism to face world hunger: exploring new needed commitments |
 | | 20. The child survival revolution: a critique or health still only for some by the year 2000? |
 | | 21. Development Nemesis |
 | | 22. Looking beyond the doable: resolutions for a new development decade |
 | | 23. Egos / alter egos of the main actors in development projects: |
 | | 24. Positive deviance in child nutrition: a discussion |
 | | 25. The project approach in development assistance |
 | | 26. Triage management in Third World health ministries |
 | | 27. On behalf of the African child: challenges and windows of opportunity for the donor community.* |
 | | 28. The household entitlements revolution, or a women-centered approach to family security - an open letter |
 | | 29. Brave new world: a political pendulum in search of its balance. |
 | | 30. Malnutrition and income: are we being misled? (a dissenting view with a confusing literature) |
 | | 31. A path for the 1990s?: government-donor partnership to finance PHC in the third world. |
 | | 32. Downsizing the civil service in developing countries: the golden handshake option revisited. |
 | | 33. The World declaration on nutrition and the 1992 International Conference on nutrition (ICN) plan of action: the cutting edge of conventional thinking.* |
 | | 34. Income generation activities for women, the ninth essential element of primary health care?: An idea whose time has come! |
 | | 35. Some reflections on ACC/SCN'S 'how nutrition improves' |
 | | 36. Nutritional goals for the mid-nineties: a call for advocacy and action |
 | | 37. The emerging sustainable development paradigm: a global forum on the cutting edge of progressive thinking |
 | | 37 A. Sustainable development beyond ethical pronouncements: the role of civil society and networking |
 | | 38. Foreign aid: giving conditionalities a good name or conditionalities: the launching of a South-South counter-offensive |
 | | 39. The community development dilemma: when are service delivery, capacity building, advocacy and social mobilisation really empowering? |
 | | 40. Development in the mid 1990s: reflections of an old socialist |
 | | 41. BOOK REVIEW: Questioning the solution The politics of primary health care and child survival with an in-depth critique of oral rehydration therapy |
 | | 42. Equity in health and nutrition and the globalization of the world's economy |
 | | 43. The different challenges in combating micronutrient deficiencies and combating protein energy malnutrition, or the gap between nutrition engineers and nutrition activists |
 | | 44. Northern-led development: is it selling technical fixes to solve the problems of ill-health and malnutrition? |
 | | 45. Actions and activism in fostering genuine grassroots participation in health and nutrition |
 | | 46. Health, nutrition and sustainable development. |
 | | 47. NEW PERSPECTIVES, OLD RISKS: OUR NEED TO CHANGE AND TO RECONCEPTUALIZE or REEMPHASIZING THE NEED TO TACKLE THE CAUSES OF POVERTY IN THE BATTLE AGAINST ILL-HEALTH AND MALNUTRITION |
 | | 48. Health sector reform measures: are they working?... And where do we go from here? |
 | | 49. On development, the real world, power games and the ugly faces of greed. |
 | | 50. So what... (in search of the 'big picture' in development ... Food for a depressive thought) |
 | | 51. Can significantly greater equity be achieved through targeting?: An essay on poverty, equity and targeting in health and nutrition. (*) |
 | | 52. Globalization, or the fable of the mongoose and the snake |
 | | 53. Elements for a nutrition activism course and curriculum* |
 | | 54. The role of human rights in politicizing development ethics, development assistance and development praxis |
 | | 55. A letter to the student Erica who is planning to specialize in international nutrition |