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Showing posts from July, 2021

30/07

Public Opinion Survey Ranks Global Priorities for SDGs  https://sdg.iisd.org/news/public-opinion-survey-ranks-global-priorities-for-sdgs/ https://www.globaltimes.cn/opinion/ China’s ‘splinternet’ will create a state-controlled alternative cyberspace https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/jun/03/chinas-splinternet-blockchain-state-control-of-cyberspace# https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/commentisfree/2021/may/12/why-is-the-world-being-hit-by-wave-after-wave-of-covid-when-we-know-how-to-stop-it https://docs.google.com/document/d/1X1wFXLTBft8XUpzGyNY18O_PJNbF13BarIb10Y7e_1o/edit

Paraphrasing

Give me the gist of the following information: Example : The New York Times provide the situation of CH and her family to portray .. Before the pandemic, Carla Huanca and her family were making modest but meaningful improvements to their cramped apartment in the slums of Buenos Aires. She was working as a hairstylist. Her partner was tending bar at a nightclub. Together, they were bringing home about 25,000 pesos ($270) a week — enough to add a second story to their home, creating extra space for their three boys. They were about to plaster the walls. “Then, everything closed,” said Ms. Huanca, 33. “We were left with nothing.” Amid the lockdown, she and her family needed emergency handouts from the Argentine government to keep food on the table. They resigned themselves to rough walls. They shelled out for wireless internet service to allow their children to manage remote learning. “We have spent all of our savings,” Ms. Huanca said. The  global economic devastation  that has ...

new york times!

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 https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/19/business/argentina-economy.html ‘We Were Left With Nothing’: Argentina’s Misery Deepens in the Pandemic The economy contracted by nearly 10 percent last year, and the country faces a reckoning with the I.M.F. over $45 billion in debts. Volunteers at a soup kitchen in the slums of Buenos Aires. The pandemic has added to strains on Argentina’s poor. Credit... Sarah Pabst for The New York Times By  Peter S. Goodman  and  Daniel Politi April 19, 2021 Leer en español Before the pandemic, Carla Huanca and her family were making modest but meaningful improvements to their cramped apartment in the slums of Buenos Aires. She was working as a hairstylist. Her partner was tending bar at a nightclub. Together, they were bringing home about 25,000 pesos ($270) a week — enough to add a second story to their home, creating extra space for their three boys. They were about to plaster the walls. “Then, everything closed,” said Ms. Huanca, 33. “We w...