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In this groundbreaking study, Roger Bate traces the burgeoning international trade in counterfeit pharmaceuticals.
This book argues that water markets introduce flexibility, reduce waste, allow fairer distribution andmore rational development of new resources, and therefore smaller environmental impacts.
US government foreign assistance health programs are currently focused on combating HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria, which account for several million deaths each year across Africa. The United States should prioritize sustaining the hard-won gains in disease control, which requires focusing on programs with proven track records of success and addressing failures within those programs.
The world"s largest countries face future water crises, but Australia points the way forward in water property rights.
When the research-based pharmaceutical industry gives up investing in innovation, where will new medicines come from?
Making a Killing champions greater cooperation between wealthy and poor nations to restrict the trade in counterfeit pharmaceuticals.
Managing water sustainably is one of America's leading environmental problems, far more significant than climate change; it is also more important to developing countries.
It may well be time to allocate some of the ballooning AIDS budget to measuring what is actually causing problems in Africa.






