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Fwd: [New post] New Reports and Publications on Syria; Women; Malawi; and the West Bank


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From: Refugee Archives @ UEL <comment-reply@wordpress.com>
Date: 17 March 2014 08:04
Subject: [New post] New Reports and Publications on Syria; Women; Malawi; and the West Bank




Paul V Dudman posted: "A collection of newly released reports and publications on Refugee and Forced Migration issues: A Devastating Toll: the Impact of Three Years of War on the Health of Syria’s Children By Save the Children Syria’s shattered health system is forcing hea"
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New post on Refugee Archives @ UEL

New Reports and Publications on Syria; Women; Malawi; and the West Bank

by Paul V Dudman
A collection of newly released reports and publications on Refugee and Forced Migration issues:
A Devastating Toll: the Impact of Three Years of War on the Health of Syria’s Children
By Save the Children
Syria’s shattered health system is forcing health workers to engage in brutal medical practices and a series of epidemics have left millions of children exposed to a plethora of deadly diseases, Save the Children says in a new report.
The report, “A Devastating Toll: the Impact of Three Years of War on the Health of Syria’s Children”, sheds light on a broken health system and its consequences: children not just dying from violent means but from diseases that would previously either have been treatable or prevented.
(Source: ReliefWeb).
Life can change: Securing housing, land and property rights for displaced women.
By the Norwegian Refugee Council.
Despite more than US$4 billion invested in justice in conflict-affected and developing countries in one year alone, displaced women are still denied their housing, land and property rights during and after conflict, according to an NRC report launched today. The report shows that returnee women in Afghanistan are evicted from family homes after divorce. In Gaza they miss out on shelter when it is allocated to male heads of households. And in South Sudan returning widows are denied inherited land by customary authorities.
(Source: ReliefWeb).
The Gender Advantage: Women on the front line of climate change.
By the International Fund for Agricultural Development.
The report, The Gender Advantage: Women on the front line of climate change, shows that successful adaptation to climate change means recognizing the role of women smallholder farmers. It describes the lives of millions of women around the world who have been able to better support their families and communities because on gender-sensitive adaptation. "At IFAD, we believe in people-centered solutions that include solutions for climate change," said Kanayo F. Nwanze, President of IFAD. "We need adaptation solutions that build on the diverse knowledge, priorities and capacities of women and men."
(Source: ReliefWeb).
Malawi’s Open Aid Map.
By the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and others.
[Download Full Report]
In the Spotlight: Area C Vulnerability Profile.
By the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
[Download Full Report]

Paul V Dudman | Monday, March 17, 2014 at 8:59 am | Tags: Publications, reports | Categories: Online Resources, Resources | URL: http://wp.me/piBzM-1Nj
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