Despite decades of progress in closing the gender equality gap, close to nine out of 10 men and women around the world, hold some sort of bias against women, according to new findings published on Thursday from the UN Development Programmme (UNDP).
Questions remain whether other oil exporters will join the pact to slash output—and if that will be enough to push up crude prices.
Peace advocates and hardliners within the Taliban are feuding over whether to stick to the fragile agreement, the Pentagon says.
Plus de 30 millions de chômeurs — 8,5 % de la population active — sont à la recherche d'un emploi dans les pays industrialisés membres de l'OCDE où aucune amélioration sensible n'est attendue pour les dix-huit mois à venir. Avec 2 574 100 demandeurs d'emploi — 10,7 % de la population active, — la (...)
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France,
Fiscalité,
Inégalités -
1987/02
Indian culture may be ancient, but its unity is rare and recent. A growing hostility to Muslims threatens to upend the world’s largest democracy.
If he leads the next government, the prime minister is likely to annex much of the West Bank and deepen attacks on judicial independence.
The Syrian government offensive in Idlib has raised the stakes for Turkey and Russia.
The EU refused to prepare for a predictable rekindling of the migration crisis—and is now responding with deadly force.
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, the fifth United Nations Secretary-General, praised for his ability to foster dialogue and for leading the Organization through a turbulent decade, has passed away at the age of 100.
The appointment of White House aide Sean Doocey could douse hopes of change for a battered and bruised State Department bureau.
Many global programmes aimed at countering violent extremism have negative impacts on human rights and may even ‘foster radicalization’ rather than preventing it, an independent UN human rights expert warned on Wednesday.
Airstrikes against Taliban forces threaten to undermine a pact that may be already coming apart.
Difficult winter weather conditions, road congestion and military manoeuvres are restricting humanitarian aid delivery to desperate civilians in the Syrian province of Idlib, where a Government operation to weed out extremists has uprooted nearly one million people since December.
Human rights defenders working in conflict and post-conflict situations need to be given greater recognition, protection and support, an independent UN expert said on Wednesday, in his latest report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva.
The organizing committee of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), a major UN conference scheduled to take place in March, has decided to cut the event down to a one-day meeting, citing current concerns surrounding the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus.
Positive developments in South Sudan have “moved the country further along the road to sustainable peace”, the top UN official there told Security Council members on Wednesday.
The extent of the damage to the global economy caused by novel coronavirus COVID-19 moved further into focus on Wednesday as UN economists announced a likely $50 billion drop in worldwide manufacturing exports in February alone.
Intense clashes in Yemen’s Al Hazam City, this month have caused massive displacement with an estimated 1,800 families forced to flee their homes, according to a flash update from UN humanitarian coordination office, OCHA.
Bien que ce monde soit rétréci aux dimensions, dit-on, d'un « village planétaire », aucun lien ne saurait exister, à première vue, entre les mouvements de grève qui ont paralysé les services publics en France et la décision prise par le gouvernement brésilien d'expulser la banque Mellon. Ces deux (...)
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Criminalité financière,
Libéralisme,
Travail -
1987/02
Twenty-five years after the historic Beijing women’s conference in China – a milestone in advancing equal rights – violence against women and girls is not only common, but widely accepted, a new UN report revealed on Wednesday.
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