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How do you get 4.2 million mosquito nets into the DR Congo rainforest?

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Democratic Republic of Congo, Health

Last week I travelled to the province of Equateur in north-western Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to launch a bednet distribution programme that will protect 8 million people from malaria. Equateur is the DRC's largest province - larger than Zimbabwe. …

An unequal society: tackling differences in health between rich and poor in South Africa

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Africa, Health

The Essential Steps to Manage Obstetric Emergencies (ESMOE) project, which I mentioned in my last post, is linked to a larger programme of support that the Department for International Development (DFID) provides to the Government of South Africa called Reducing …

Power to deliver: equipping health centres in DR Congo with renewable energy

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Climate Change, Democratic Republic of Congo, Health, Infrastructure

Blogging by candlelight seems like a contradiction in terms.  But in the city of Kananga – the most Bond villain-sounding of a strong field of Congolese place names – it’s candlelight or nothing.  Kananga is a “ville noire” – which …

How can we use technology to improve education in Tanzania?

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Education, Tanzania, Technology

Whilst I was still a young child, Tanzania's founding father and President Julius Nyerere, highlighted the benefits of mass education on accountability to the people: "An educated Ujamaa Village, for example, will neither allow nor tolerate dishonesty among its accountants or …

Putting on my sceptical hat for access to energy

Economists have a reputation for being sceptical. So much so that there is a book called the Skeptical Economist, and a new book referring to economics as the dismal science. This has a lot to do with our teaching. For …