Books
- > PRESS MATERIAL - Social Watch Report 2012
- The IMF’s poverty reduction and growth facility: A blind alley
- Basic Capabilities Index (BCI) 2008 - WAY TOO SLOW!
- Social Watch Report 2008: Rights is the answer
- SOCIAL WATCH REPORT 2012 - OVERVIEW
- Social Watch Report 2014
- Interim Version Millennium Development Goals a people's progress report
- Social Watch Rapporto 2010 - Dopo la caduta
- "One of the most dynamic and stable markets in the hemisphere"
- 06 OCCASIONAL PAPERS - Putting gender economics at the forefront
- 07 CUADERNOS OCASIONALES - Desafíos en común
- 13h among the poorest
- 2006 budget: some gains, but not enough for the poor to benefit
- 24 millionaires, 40 million poor
- 33% without basic services
- A country of injustice
- A culture of irresponsibility
- A deficit in international leadership
- A difficult context for poverty reduction
- A fascinating example of successful liberalisation?
- A Hard Time
- A humanitarian crisis
- A long way to go to reduce poverty by 2015
- A nation in the dark
- A painful transition
- A poverty reduction strategy that made little progress
- A priority debate postponed
- A question of (in)security
- A resource allocation that will not meet the MDGs
- A rich society, a poor welfare state
- A risky business
- A tale of unfulfilled promises
- A very vulnerable "development"
- Absolute Poverty: 59.3%
- Accountability needed
- Achievements and challenges
- Adding insult to injury
- Adjustment produces redistribution that favours the financial sector
- Adjustments, debt and privatisations: what will become of our rights?
- Advance Social Watch Report 2005 - Unkept Promises
- After 60 years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- Against poverty and exclusion
- Ambitious poverty reduction plan faces daunting barriers
- Among plans and hopes
- Among the most unequal
- An "amazing" growth
- An active role for development
- An insecure and corrupt model
- An obscene inequality
- An urgent need for public awareness
- ANALISIS DE SITUACIÓN (Periodo enero/diciembre 2010) - Guatemala
- Antipoverty rhetoric: more Programme than Action
- Anuario 2011. POLÍTICAS COHERENTES PARA UNA CIUDADANÍA GLOBAL - Edición española del Informe Social Watch 2011
- Appalling legacy of poverty and inequality
- At the crossroads
- At the mercy of the "sentiment of the market"
- Back to the future
- Balancing goals, commitments and means
- Basic Capabilities Index (BCI) 2007 - FAR FROM WHERE WE SHOULD BE
- BASIC CAPABILITIES INDEX 2009
- Basic Capabilities Index 2010 - SLOWING DOWN
- Basic economic and social rights denied
- Basic Education and the Elimination of Poverty
- Basic Education: 1991-1994
- Basic Needs and Enabling Environment
- Basic social services still inaccessible
- Battered but not beaten
- Before and after SAP
- Before reaching age five
- Beginning to open
- Being a woman is dangerous
- Believe it or not: more poor people
- Belligerent but poor
- Benefit of an elite at the expense of the poor majority
- Between cuts and commitments
- Between poverty and inequalities
- Between poverty and violence
- Between stagnation and inequity
- Birds in a Larger Cage
- Bitter irony
- Blockade, repression and human rights violations
- Can we pick up the pieces?
- Česká republika se řítí do smrtící spirály - Národní zpráva české koalice Social Watch za rok 2011
- Change or poverty: that's the question
- Changes following the foreign exchange crisis
- Civil society gaining shape
- Climax and decline
- Combatting poverty without a gender perspective
- Commitment 3
- Commitment and coherence; a tall order?
- Commitment by commitment
- Concrete action needed on domestic social welfare and foreign aid policies
- Confronting the fiscal crisis through privatisation
- Constituency Development Fund disappoints hopes for community-based development
- Control ciudadano desde la base
- CONTRÔLE CITOYEN N° 1 - 1997
- Corruption and mismanagement threaten jute mills
- Corruption, poverty and other weapons
- Costly “debt relief” and trade agreements
- Czech version of the Social Watch 2006 poster (pdf)
- Das internationale Finanzsystem ist gescheitert
- Dashed expectations
- Debt relief, increased debt
- Demands for participation in decisions and economic benefits
- Democracy insecure: poverty holding steady
- Democracy is retreating
- Democracy vs. corruption
- Democratic deficits in the midst of liberalisation
- Despite successes, vulnerability persists
- Deteriorating living conditions and job instability
- Deteriorating quality of life
- DEUTSCHLAND REPORT 2005 / NR. 5 - HANDELN STATT VERSPRECHEN
- Development assistance and banking policies undermine MDGs
- Development at any cost
- Development policy without gender equality
- Diagnosis of poverty and inequality
- Difficulties to be overcome
- Dignity and Sustenance
- Divided and distracted: regionalism as an obstacle to reducing poverty and inequality
- Economic adjustment and social disadjustment
- Economic and social rights: there is no political will
- Economic growth and poverty
- Economic growth versus human development
- Economic growth: 5,5%
Absolute poverty: 30%
- Economic justice, social justice
- Economic model limits change
- Economic progress and increasing disparities
- Economic social and environmental consequences of the war: a preliminary assessment
- Economic, social and cultural rights at risk
- Economic, social and cultural rights: reforms and the harsh reality
- Economic, social and cultural rights: violations vs. moratorium
- Education for all
- EL DERECHO A NO SER POBRE - SOCIAL WATCH INFORME 2008 - Edición española
- EL PERFIL SOCIAL DEL DESARROLLO - SOCIAL WATCH INFORME 2007 - Edición española
- Employment
- Employment is the crux
- Endemic poverty and state violence
- Equity postponed
- Equity, a women’s struggle
- Eradicate poverty, negotiate war
- Eroding commitments to end poverty
- Erosion of rights and marketisation of development
- Ethnic divisions and dissolution of responsibility
- EUROPEAN SOCIAL WATCH REPORT 2009 - Migrants in Europe as Development Actors
- European Union: opportunity or marginalisation?
- European Union: Unemployment and Poverty
- Everyday life is another question
- Excluding strategies
- Exclusion persists in one of the most wealthiest country in the world
- Exclusion, fragmentation and lack of political will
- Extreme need
- Extreme poverty has doubled
- Extreme poverty, forced labour, “honour crimes”…
- Facts policy
- Far away from the 2015 goals
- Far from a rights-centred approach
- Federalism, privatisation and an individualist philosophy
- Few hopes
- Fewer poor, more marginalised
- Fighting mad – Canada’s new focus on the world
- Five years of constant reversals
- For being a woman, for being indigenous, for being black...
- Forgotten crisis, irreversible damage
- Free markets and the threat to basic food rights
- From first aid to self-help
- From formality to reality
- From word to deed
- Fulfilment of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
- Full version of the tables in the Social Watch Report 2009
- Further than ever from the 0.7%
- Gaps and efforts in social protection
- Gender and poverty
- Gender Equity Index (GEI) 2007
- Gender Equity Index (GEI) 2008
- Gender equity: among the best of the worst
- Globalisation and the impact of war
- Globalisation consolidated poverty and increased inequality
- Globalisation, poverty and inequity
- Gone with the wind?
- Good intentions....Uncertain future
- Good morning, capitalism! Good bye social protection!
- Government secrecy threatens civil and economic rights
- Grand poverty and corruption
- Greater investment in development, more progress in gender issues
- Growing dependence on inadequate foreign aid
- Growth without development: rhetoric and deprivation
- Growth without equity
- Growth, poverty and inequality
- Guidelines for an Annual Report
- Half-committed
- Health: Sick
- High hopes, little progress
- High level of social security under threat
- High spending, poor results
- High unemployment and low social security
- Higher Growth, Fewer Jobs
- Historical revision of social equity
- How politics chips away the economy and human rights
- Human and social rights: not always a given
- Human rights and globalization: trinkets for gold
- Human rights back on the agenda
- Human rights implementation – mystification or truth?
- Human rights in political-economic perspective
- Human rights, corruption and impunity
- Human rights, dignity and solidarity
- Human rights: impressive legislation but inadequate implementation
- Hungry for peace
- Impacts of liberalisation
- IMPATTO SOCIALE DELLA GLOBALIZZAZIONE NEL MONDO Social Watch – Rapporto 2002
- Impending challenges
- Implementing the commitments
- Improved articulation between social programmes needed
- Improvements and exclusions
- In exchange for oil...
- In fear and want
- In need of increased long-term social spending
- In search of food security
- In the hands of the oligopoly of foreign capital
- In the hands of transnational capital and free trade
- In the midst of an unresolved crisis
- In the shadow of economic priorities
- Inadequate commitment
- Income levels low and poverty high
- Ineffective aid and emerging risks
- Inequality and poverty: a macrovision
- Inequality on the rise
- Inequality: the latest data
- Inequity in the economic and private spheres
- Infant Mortality and Social Context
- Informe de Social Watch 2009 - Poner a trabajar las finanzas: Primero la gente - Libro
- Insecurity amid wealth
- Insecurity for all
- Insufficient service provision from public-private associations
- Intentions are not enough
- International obligations remain unfulfilled
- Introducing a gender perspective: a case study
- Inverted priorities
- Investment and labour rights: a case study
- Investments that do not guarantee rights
- Is the glass half full or half empty?
- Israel’s wall: less security for all
- ITALIAN VERSION OF THE BASIC CAPABILITIES INDEX 2008 (pdf)
- Italian: LA QUALITÀ DELLA VITA NEL MONDO Social Watch – Rapporto 2001
- La pobreza y la desigualdad en América Latina
- Lack of political will
- Land of contradictions
- Land poverty
- LEARNING FROM SUCCESSFUL EXPERIENCES
- Learning to give as well as receive
- Less poverty, more inequality
- Less State, fewer benefits
- Life expectancy: 30 years
- Life expectancy: 40 years
- Life expectancy: 52.2 years
- Life expectancy: forty-two
- Little headway, growing injustice
- Living with the enemy
- Longing for a peaceful country
- Longing for peace
- Low participation of women in the formal economy
- Low-intensity democracy
- Macroeconomic growth and social exclusion
- Macroeconomic growth, challenging realities
- Making progress... but not enough
- Management of public funds must be improved
- Market-friendly, indeed... but pro-poor?
- Meagre pensions, a precarious health care system
- Measuring Inequity: The 2012 Gender Equity Index
- Measuring political will
- Migration and displacement: a growing and multifaceted problem
- Millennium Development Goals a people's progress report - Main Report
- Mired in the unsolved National Question
- MISSING TARGETS An alternative MDG midterm report - Social Watch Philippines Report 2007
- Modernity and exclusion
- Momentum and stumbling blocks
- More development aid, though discrimination remains
- More market and fewer rights: the State’s response to the housing crisis
- More poor than 15 years ago
- Most old age pensions fall short of basic needs
- Most unequal in the West
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Narrow agenda undermines domestic and global development
- Neglected by the state
- New Challenges
- New efforts to incorporate the informal sector
- New excuses for old abuses
- New government, old problems
- New hope for stalled economic, social and cultural rights?
- New prescription for an old medicine
- New pronouncements. A new era?
- New scenario to achieve equity
- New thinking is imperative
- New welfare, new gaps
- No funds to finance the MDGs
- No guarantees, no security
- No hope for the poor
- No rule of law
- No social progress in Germany, artificially inflated development aid abroad
- No social, cultural or environmental rights
- No war but many victims
- Not much of an economy for the people
- Now the responsibility lies with the individuals
- Number one?
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA - RELATÓRIO 2005 - N° 9
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA N° 2 - 1998
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA N° 3 - 1999
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA N° 4 - 2000
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA RELATÓRIO 2001 N° 5
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA - RELATÓRIO 2002 - N° 6 O IMPACTO SOCIAL DA GLOBALIZAÇÃO NO MUNDO
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA - RELATÓRIO 2003 - N° 7 População pobre versus mercado
- Observatório da cidadania - Relatório 2004 - N° 8 Medos e Privações Obstáculos à segurança humana
- Observatório da Cidadania 2006 - Arquitetura da Exclusão
- Observatório da Cidadania 2007 - Dignidade e direitos
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA 2009 - Ediçao Especial - Diálogos sobre violência e segurança pública
- OBSERVATÓRIO DA CIDADANIA MONITORANDO O DESENVOLVIMENTO N° 1 - 1997
- Oil dependency: short-term benefits but a long-term impossibility
- Oil exploitation versus citizens rights
- Oil prosperity and citizen poverty
- Oil wealth could meet social needs
- Old age pensions near the poverty line
- On stage without a script
- On the doorstep of European integration
- On the erased side of the Alps
- On the way to deepening social inequalities
- One in two
- Osservatorio internazionale sullo sviluppo sociale 1998
- Osservatorio internazionale sullo sviluppo sociale 1999
- Osservatorio internazionale sullo sviluppo sociale 2000
- Palestinian refugees in Lebanon
- Panorama of Inequality
- Paradise for a few
- Pathways to Regional Development: Setbacks, Alternatives and Citizens´Participation
- Peace under-mined
- Pending Development...
- Persistent disparities
- Plans, obstacles and affirmative action
- Plantation workers face poverty and poison
- Polders and tides
- Political will is the key to social protection
- Political will needed
- Polski Raport Social Watch 2008 - Czas na prawa
- Poor internal and external policies
- Post-crisis reconstruction
- Poverty again at the Center of Debate
- Poverty and wealth disparities
- Poverty Decreases but Insatisfaction Grows
- Poverty does not exist
- Poverty eradication requires citizen participation
- Poverty grows, Social Breach grows
- Poverty in a prolonged transition
- Poverty in the midst of the market: the Zambian scenario
- Poverty indicators
- Poverty persists despite well-developed safety net
- Poverty, the main obstacle
- Poverty: the challege for peace
- Precarious progress
- Presentation of 2009 Social Watch Gender Equity Index
- Pressing objectives
- PRIMERO LA GENTE - SOCIAL WATCH INFORME 2009 - EDICIÓN ESPAÑOLA
- Priorities of the Vicente Fox government
- Private capital not responsible for poverty
- Privatisation versus the poor
- Privatisation, conflict and discontent
- Privatisation: a process with cracks
- Privatisation: a troubling legacy
- Privatization targets few remaining public services
- Privatization versus defence of public services
- Privatization: from promises to failure
- Processing without strategies
- Productive employment and sustainable livelihood: The Indian Situation
- Programmes do not address the roots of poverty
- Progress and setbacks in a period of transition
- Progress towards parity
- Progressing with handicaps
- Promises broken by weak institutions, poverty and corruption
- Proposals for the development of human capital
- Public administration lacks transparency
- Public budget: financial expenditures devour rights
- Quest for cohesion:
social policies and inclusive education
- Rallying Against Poverty
- Rapport de Contrôle Citoyen 2002 - Impact Social de la Globalisation à travers le monde
- Rapport de Contrôle Citoyen 2003 - Les pauvres et le marché
- Rapport de Contrôle Citoyen 2004 - LA PEUR ET LE BESOIN OBSTACLES A LA SECURITE HUMAINE
- Rationalizing social spending to accelerate social development
- Realities, promises and illusions
- Relying on others: provision of water and health care
- Richer than ever - and tougher
- Right to social security under threat
- Rights acknowledged, changes pending
- Rights and human security to break the vicious circle
- Rights, budgets and building alternatives
- Rights, commitments and delivery: who gets what, when and how?
- Rising poverty and gender inequity
- Rockbottom economic status
- Romaphobia and fascism on the rise
- Scant guarantees
- Scarce transparency in services policies
- Searching for the new Indonesia
- Seeking equality in an unequal society
- Selling our grandparents’ inheritance
- Service industry deregulation: corporate crime and tougher disciplines on the poor
- Setbacks in democracy and development
- Shape up or ship out!
- Shrinking resources for development at home and abroad
- Shrinking state role undermines social protection
- Sixty years and waiting
- Sixty years in abject poverty
- Sliding into insecurity
- Slow progress toward meeting needs
- Social cohesion
- Social Debt: the difficult commitment
- Social development is a priority
- Social development under siege
- Social expenditure does not serve its purpose
- Social Inequity in the Nineties
- Social injustice and exclusion
- Social mobilisation against privatisation
- Social protection hampered by bad governance
- Social protection: a guaranteed right in theory, but not in practice
- Social protection: a view from childhood and adolescence
- Social security impossible without stability
- Social security remains a distant reality for most
- Social security remains an illusion
- Social security under threat
- Social security: not yet social or secure
- SOCIAL WATCH PHILIPPINES 2005 REPORT Race for Survival Hurdles on the road to meeting the MDGs in 2015
- SOCIAL WATCH - RAPPORTO 2003 - PRIVATIZZARE I SERVIZI IL COSTO SOCIALE
- Social Watch 2003 - Arabic
- Social Watch 2004 - Arabic
- Social Watch 2004 - Fear and Want - Obstacles to Human Security
- Social Watch 2012 - Česká republika: Úpadeka Rezignace
- Social Watch Annual Report 1996
- Social Watch Annual Report 1997
- Social Watch Annual Report 1998
- Social Watch Annual Report 1999
- Social Watch Annual Report 2000
- Social Watch Annual Report 2001
- Social Watch Deutschland Report 2001 / NR. 1
- Social Watch Deutschland Report 2002 / NR. 2 - SOCIALE ENTWICKLUNG IN DEN ZEITEN DER GLOBALISIERUNG
- Social Watch Deutschland Report 2003 / NR. 3 - DIE ARMEN UND DER MARKT
- SOCIAL WATCH DEUTSCHLAND REPORT 2004 / NR. 4 - In Angst und Not - Bedrohungen menschlicher Sicherheit
- SOCIAL WATCH DEUTSCHLAND REPORT 2006 / NR. 6 - KEIN GELD FÜR DIE ARMEN?
- SOCIAL WATCH DEUTSCHLAND REPORT 2007 / NR. 7 - WÜRDE UND MENSCHENRECHTE WAHREN
- SOCIAL WATCH DEUTSCHLAND REPORT 2009 / NR. 8 - Globale Krisen. Soziale Auswirkungen – politische Konsequenzen
- SOCIAL WATCH GENDER EQUITY INDEX 2009
- Social Watch Philippines - MONITORING REPORT 2003 - TRACKING PROGRESS Accomplishments and Shortfalls in Local Social Development
- Social Watch Philippines 2001 Report
- Social Watch Rapporto 2004 "La Vera sicurezza" Vincere le paure, rispondere ai bisogni
- Social Watch Rapporto 2006 - ARCHITETTURA IMPOSSIBILE
- Social Watch Rapporto 2008 - Crisi globale. La risposta: ripartire dai diritti
- SOCIAL WATCH RAPPORTO 2009 - People first
- SOCIAL WATCH RELATÓRIO 2012 - O direito a um futuro
- Social Watch Report 2002 - THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF GLOBALISATION IN THE WORLD
- Social Watch Report 2003 - The Poor and the Market
- Social Watch Report 2005: Roars and Whispers
- Social Watch Report 2006 - Impossible Architecture
- Social Watch Report 2007 - in dignity and rights
- Social Watch Report 2007 Overview
- Social Watch Report 2008 Overview
- Social Watch Report 2009 - ARABIC VERSION
- Social Watch Report 2009 - OVERVIEW
- SOCIAL WATCH REPORT 2010 - OVERVIEW
- SOCIAL WATCH REPORT 2011 - Editors’ guidelines for national reports
- SOCIAL WATCH Report 2012 - arabic version الحقُّ في مستقبل
- Social Watch Report 2012 - THE RIGHT TO A FUTURE
- Social «Reform»
- Socially irresponsible
- Some improvements but not enough
- Some steps forward, some steps back
- Spain faces inequity
- Stagnant and disenchanted
- Stagnation of socioeconomic rights
- State inefficiency and inaction
- Stifled in development and scared of getting old
- Still much to learn
- Strategy and Dialogue
- Strategy of Shame
- Structural adjustment and public social spending
- Structural consolidation of social exclusion
- Structural obstacles at a time of crisis
- Structural reform versus social development?
- Structural violence in the southern provinces
- Success and lapses
- Suicides, credit default, natural catastrophes and the threat of war
- Sustained growth and persistent poverty
- Ten years over, ten years to go
- Terror, poverty, crisis and earthquakes
- Thanks to family remittances
- The accumulated effects of inequality
- The anaemic elephant
- The Arab women citizens: doubly discriminated
- The benefits and challenges of EU membership
- The big sale in the water supply market
- The brutal rationale of privatisation
- The challenge of consistency
- The challenge of inequality
- The challenge of redirecting reforms and resources towards the human factor
- The challenge of solidarity in the face of globalization
- The challenge of “starting two motors”
- The challenge to eliminate extreme poverty
- The Cikini jewels
- The Context
- The contradictory road to equity
- The Copenhagen agreements
- The Copenhagen goals are still far-off
- The crisis of financing development
- The crisis still looms large
- The current undermining of the Welfare State
- The damage of declining public investment on services
- The damage of liberalisation and the dead-end of debt
- The dark side of global markets
- The disappointing “growth” decade
- The Doi Moi policy and its impact on the poor
- The drawbacks of poor governance
- The economy in a coma
- The economy is fine: the country is not
- The end of apartheid was not the end of poverty
- The eruption of a model
- The eternal pyramid
- The fantasy of “good housekeeping”
- The fourth commitment
- The frightening picture behind the pin-up
- The fruits of a long road
- The future on hold
- The gap between two countries grows
- The GEI 2009
- The glass you are looking through
- The hard road to political equity
- The high cost of private monopolies
- The implicit agenda of a conservative patrimonial reform
- The invisible price women have to pay for privatisation
- The laboratory mouse of international institutions
- The lack of vision of the National Vision Policy
- The Land
- The legacy of colonialism
- The Lion's Teeth - THE 'PREHISTORY' OF Social Watch
- The long distance between promises and realities
- The long road to poverty eradication
- The many faces of inequality
- The many programmes and the many poor
- The Millennium Goals need a caring state
- The money into the pockets of foreign companies
- The myth that never came true
- The NCWD and the Beijing platform for action
- The need to control financial capital
- The need to put social security back on the agenda
- The neo-liberal State: debt, inequality and poverty
- The neoliberal economic programme: cluster bomb against human rights
- The new pension paradigm: will it work for all?
- The non-regular workers’ wasteland
- The numbers of the last five years
- The obstacles of tradition, war and poverty
- The other face
- The other walls
- The people halt privatisation
- The poor are poorer and more insecure
- The poor unprotected
- The poor...are they saved?
- The poorest among the rich
- The prevalence of poverty
- The price of being agreeable to the IMF
- The Quicksand of the economic model
- The race to meet the Millennium Development Goals
- The redundant military
- The reform of the social sector: statism, inequality and privatisation by default
- The results of neo-liberal guidelines
- The right to not be poor
- The road from Monterrey: a caution from Canada
- The road to travel is longer than the road travelled
- The same landscape
- The scourge of corruption, violence and robbery
- The sinking ship
- The Social Cycle Agenda: "Impasses" and Challenges
- The social programme of the Bolivarian Republic
- The social reform agenda
- The social security that women want
- The stark realities of an ideological orthodoxy
- The straw in the neighbour’s eye
- The struggle for the land
- The struggle over water
- The tasks pending
- The time has come for budget transparency
- The unacknowledged social implications
- The urgent need to mobilize public resources to finance development
- The violation of social rights within market rationale
- The violence of inequality
- The water case: increased rates for poorer services
- The widening gap between rich and poor
- The “Paris III Conference” and the reform agenda
- Think globally, neglect the locals
- Thirst and water
- Time for democracy
- To be a woman is to be poorer
- To the detriment of women, children and the poor
- Tollerance at risk
- Towards a new founding pact
- Towards assimilation into the world economy
- Trade logic takes precedence
- Trading off human security for fiscal balance
- Transition and participation
- Transition: gains and losses
- Traps for democracy
- Twice as many hungry
- Two different worlds
- Two Dimensions: Health and Gender
- Two years after Copenhagen
- Under pressure
- Undeveloped potential
- Unequal access
- Unequal progress
- Uninterested in gender issues
- United Nations General Assembly interactive hearings with civil society on the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), in New York, April 1.
- Unsound government policies, successful grassroots solutions
- Urban violence, public safety policies and responses from civil society
- Urgent need for national construction
- USD 24 a month
- Vigilant civil society
- Visible deterioration
- Vulnerable and volatile
- Want in a rich country
- War and social disintegration
- Water and privatisation: doubtful benefits, concrete threats
- Weaker protection of human rights
- Weaknesses and new rights
- Welfare begins to end as recession grows
- What is not counted does not count
- What is the taste of economic growth?
- What kind of welfare?
- What's wrong with this picture?
- When social welfare is not a priority
- When the earthquake is over
- Who benefits from adjustments, war and the free market?
- Who pays? The global crises and what needs to be done
- Widespread violations
- Will Canada pawn or polish the jewel in the crown of its healthcare social system?
- Will EU inroads foster greater social security?
- Winning the Numbers, Losing the War: The Other MDG Report 2010
- Withering of the welfare state
- Without human security there can be no social security
- Women and poverty: the high price of occupation
- Women: 87.7% of the poor
- Working to develop capacity at the service of those most in need
- Would the last one to leave please turn off the lights
- Youth bear the brunt of violence, insecurity and poverty
- Zero poverty reduction and mounting human rights violations
- ZPRÁVA SOCIAL WATCH 2008 - Odpověď zní: lidská práva
- ZPRÁVA SOCIAL WATCH 2010 - Po pádu
- СОЦИАЛЬНЬІЙ НАБЛЮДАТЕЛЬ - Д О К Л А Д 2 0 1 2 - УСТОЙЧИВОЕ РАЗВИТИЕ: Право на будущее
- “A Partnership for Democracy and Shared Prosperity”
- “Ethnicising” poverty
- “Hot peace” and landlessness
- “Moni no de”
- “Shall we work together for Panama”?
- Basic Capabilities Index 2011
- Social Watch Report 2010 - After the fall
- Social Watch Report 2009 - Making finances work: People first
|