31 Search Results Found For : "%EB%B2%A0%EC%8A%A4%ED%8A%B8%20%EB%A3%A8%EC%9D%B4%EC%8A%A4%20%ED%95%B4%EB%B0%80%ED%84%B4%20%ED%98%B8%ED%85%94%EA%B5%AD%EB%82%B4%201%20%EB%B0%95%202%20%EC%9D%BC%20%EC%97%AC%ED%96%89%EC%A7%80%EF%BC%88KaKaoTalk:ZA31%EF%BC%89"
Project: PACE: Policy, Advocacy, and Communication Enhanced for Population and Reproductive Health
Family Planning and the Gendered Impacts of Crises on Women: An Effective Tool Across Sectors to Support Women’s Empowerment and Build Resilience to Shocks
Holistic integrated solutions are key to address the interlinkages of the gendered impacts of crises.
Sustainable Development Indicators: The Last Missing Piece of the 2030 Agenda
The 2015 adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) was a major milestone for United Nations (UN) Member States seeking to jumpstart efforts to improve people’s lives and maintain a healthy planet.
Population and Poverty (PopPov) Research Network
Enhancing research and policy communication in population, reproductive health, and economic development.
How Demographic Changes Make Us More Vulnerable to Pandemics Like the Coronavirus
(2020) The world is better equipped to fight a pandemic today than it was in 1918, when influenza swept the globe and infected up to one-third of the world’s population.1 While science and medical advances have given us new advantages in fighting disease, some demographic trends since 1918 may increase the risk for spreading contagions and our vulnerability to viruses.
New PRB Analysis Offers Insights as India’s Population Surpasses China’s, Notes Overlooked Rise of Sub-Saharan Africa
PRB provides analysis on why the demographic changes over the next 30 years matter for the global economy, the global labor force, and the United States.
Project: Center for Public Information on Population Research (CPIPR)
When a Parent Is Incarcerated, Partners and Children Also Pay a Price
(2020) “We live in a country where we have huge numbers of children exposed to parental incarceration. When we talk about the need to reform the criminal justice and mass incarceration systems, we also need to talk about the unintended victims of the current system,” says Christine Leibbrand of the University of Washington.