Friday, April 17, 2009

REMINDER: "AIDS - Is It a Risk to Economic Development in Regions with Low HIV Prevalence?" discussed on Monday, April 20 at 12 PM in J1-050

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MODERATOR
Julie McLaughlin
Sector Manager, Health, Nutrition, and Population, South Asia
Region, World Bank

PRESENTERS
Mariam Claeson,
Program Coordinator, South Asia Regional AIDS Team, World Bank

Mead Over
Senior Fellow, Center for Global Development

DISCUSSANTS
Robert Clay
Director, The Office of HIV/AIDS, USAID

Debrework Zewdie
Director, Global AIDS Unit, World Bank


About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers, including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

"Hardware and Software Industries in China and India" discussed on April 30 at 12 PM in J1-050

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OPENING REMARKS
Mohsen Khalil
Director, Global Information and Communication Technologies, World
Bank Group
Mr. Khalil is Director of the Global Information and Communication
Technologies department, a joint department of the World Bank and
International Finance Corporation (IFC). Prior to this appointment,
he held positions at IFC as Director of Central Asia, Middle East
and North Africa Department. He also served as Chief Investment
Officer at the Telecommunications, Transport, and Utilities
Department. Previous to this, while also a Professor of Business at
the American University of Beirut, Mr. Khalil served as Chief
Adviser to the Lebanese Minister of Post and Telecommunications; as
Board Director of Lebanon's Autonomous Fund for Housing; and as
advisor to various governments and major corporations in the Middle
East. He also worked with McKinsey & Co. Management Consultants,
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and MITRE Corporation.

AUTHORS
Neil Gregory
Adviser, Financial and Private Sector Development, World Bank Group
Office of the Chief Economist, IFC
Mr. Gregory is Adviser to the Vice President for Financial and
Private Sector Development at the World Bank. He was previously a
manager in the South Asia Department of the IFC. He has written on
the emergence of the private sector in China and on foreign direct
investment to developing countries and has lectured on the growth of
the private sector in China and India. He began his career as an
economist with the UK government, and served as adviser to the UK
Executive Director of the World Bank Group and IMF from 1993?96.

Stanley Nollen
Professor of International Business, McDonough School of Business,
Georgetown University
Mr. Nollen is professor of International Business at the Georgetown
University McDonough School of Business in Washington, DC. His
research includes studies of the growth, intellectual property, and
export performance of firms in the information technology industry
in India along with the performance of firms in emerging market
economies. He has published books and articles in leading journals.
He teaches international business and economics, and has conducted
study programs and executive education courses in Belgium, the Czech
Republic, Croatia, India, República Bolivariana de Venezuela, and
Vietnam and has twice received Fulbright scholar awards.

Stoyan Tenev
Chief Evaluation Officer and Head of Macroevaluations, Independent Evaluation
Group, IFC,
Mr. Tenev is Chief Evaluation Officer and Head of Macroevaluations
at the Independent Evaluation Group of the International Finance
Corporation. He was previously Lead Economist for East Asia and
Pacific at the IFC. His research includes books and articles on
China, East Asian economies, transition economies, economic reforms,
private sector development, and corporate governance.

DISCUSSANTS
Shahid Yusuf
Economic Adviser, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management, World
Bank Institute
Mr. Yusuf is Economic Adviser at the World Bank Institute at the
World Bank and currently manages a major project on East Asia's
Prospects. He was the Director for the 1999/2000 WDR and has held
positions in the Bank's regional and research departments. Mr.
Yusuf?s most recent publications include: Post Industrial East Asian
Cities co-authored with Kaoru Nabeshima (2006); Dancing with Giants
co-edited with L. Alan Winters ( 2007); How Universities Promote
Economic Growth co-edited with Kaoru Nabeshima (2007); China
Urbanizes co-edited with Tony Saich (2008); Growing Industrial
Clusters in Asia co-edited with Kaoru Nabeshima and Shoichi
Yamashita (2008); Accelerating Catch-Up: Tertiary Education and
Growth in Africa co-authored with William Saint and Kaoru Nabeshima
(2008); and Development Economics through the Decades (World Bank
2009).

Albert Keidel
Senior Associate, China Program, Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace
Mr. Keidel joined the Carnegie Endowment in September 2004, after
serving as acting director and deputy director for the Office of
East Asian Nations at the U.S. Department of the Treasury. His work
at the Endowment focuses on issues relating to China?s economic
system reforms, macroeconomy, regional development, and poverty
reduction strategy. Before joining Treasury in 2001, he covered
economic trends, system reforms, poverty, and country risk as a
senior economist in the World Bank office in Beijing. Mr. Keidel has
worked in China, Japan, and Korea and taught graduate economics
courses on China, Japan, and economic development. He also currently
teaches a Georgetown University graduate course on China?s economy.


About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers, including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

"Moving Out of Poverty " launched on April 27 at 12 PM in Preston Auditorium

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CHAIR
Danny Leipziger
Vice President, Poverty Reduction & Economic Management Network,
World Bank
Mr. Leipziger is the Vice President of the Poverty Reduction &
Economic Management Network (PREM) at the World Bank since 2004. As
the Head of the PREM Network, which has nearly 1000 professionals,
he reports to the President of the World Bank, and provides
leadership for the institution?s strategic work on growth and
poverty reduction across the regional PREM units. He also serves as
the focal point for economic policy, debt, trade, gender and
governance issues and for the World Bank?s dialogue with key partner
institutions?including the IMF, WTO, OECD, and the EU. In addition,
he serves as Head of the World Bank's Delegation to Hong Kong Trade
Ministerial, Head of the World Bank's Delegation to G8 Ministerials,
which is responsible for crisis analysis and policy coordination.

AUTHORS
Deepa Narayan
Project Director, Moving Out of Poverty Study, World Bank
Ms. Narayan is project director of the 15-country World Bank study
en.titled, Moving Out of Poverty: Understanding Freedom, Democracy,
and Growth from the Bottom Up. From 2002 through 2008, she served as
senior adviser in the Poverty Reduction & Economic Management (PREM)
Network of the World Bank, first in the Poverty Reduction Group and
subsequently in the vice president?s office within PREM. She has
development experience in Asia and Africa while working across
sectors for nongovernmental organizations, national governments, and
the United Nations system. Her areas of expertise include
participatory development, community-driven development, and social
capital, as well as use of these concepts to create wealth for poor
people. Her recent publications include Moving Out of Poverty:
Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Mobility (World Bank, 2007);
Ending Poverty in South Asia: Ideas that Work (with Elena Glinskaya,
World Bank 2007); Measuring Empowerment:Cross-Disciplinary
Perspectives (World Bank, 2005); Empowerment and Poverty Reduction:
A Sourcebook (World Bank 2002); and the three-volume Voices of the
Poor; series (Oxford University Press 2000, 2001, 2002).

Lant Pritchett
Professor of the Practice of Economic Development, John F. Kennedy
School of Government, Harvard University)
Mr. Pritchett is professor of the practice of economic development
at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
He is also a nonresident fellow of the Center for Global
Development, a senior fellow of BREAD (Bureau for Research and
Economic Analysis of Development), co-editor of the Journal of
Development Economics, and a consultant to Google.org. He held a
number of positions at the World Bank between 1988 and 2007, working
in Indonesia and India as well as in Washington, DC. He has
participated in teams that produced a number of World Bank reports,
including World Development Report 1994: Infrastructure for
Development; Assessing Aid: What Works, What Doesn?t, and Why
(1998); Better Health Systems for India?s Poor: Findings, Analysis,
and Options (2003); World Development Report 2004: Making Services
Work for Poor People; and Economic Growth in the 1990s: Learning
from a Decade of Reforms (2005). He has authored or co-authored more
than 50 papers published in refereed journals, as chapters in books,
or as articles. His monograph, Let Their People Come: Breaking the
Gridlock on Global Labor Mobility, was published by Center for
Global Development in 2006.

DISCUSSANT
Geoffrey Lamb
Managing Director, Public Policy, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Mr. Lamb is Managing Director for Public Policy at the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation (Washington, DC office). In this position,
he serves as the senior advisor on international policy development
and leads a team that partners with public policy issues in each of
the foundation's three program areas (Global Health, Global
Development and U.S. Programs) to help build strategic relationships
that are critical to the foundation's work. Before joining the
foundation, Mr. Lamb held several senior development positions at
the World Bank, most recently as Vice President, Concessional
Finance and Global Partnerships. An Irish citizen, he was born in
South Africa and lived in the UK, where he was subsequently a Fellow
and Deputy Director of the Institute of Development Studies at the
University of Sussex.


About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers, including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.

What's New at the InfoShop, April 2009

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Come and visit the InfoShop. There is always something new. The titles below
have just been added to our collection.


World Bank Staff receive 30% discount on World Bank titles, and 10% discount on
externally published titles.


Click on the title (World Bank publications only) for more information.

Africa Development Indicators 2008/09: Youth and Employment in Africa: The
Potential, the Problem, the Promise . $120.00pb w/CD-ROM


Africa Development Indicators 2008/09 Multi-User CD-ROM. $200.00


Aging Population, Pension Funds, and Financial Markets: Regional Perspectives
and Global Challenges for Central, Eastern, and Southern Europe, edited by
Robert Holzmann. $25.00pb


An Assessment of the Investment Climate in Kenya, by Giuseppi Iarossi. $15.00pb


Breaking Into New Markets: Emerging Lessons for Export Diversification, edited
by Richard Newfarmer, William Shaw and Peter Walkenhorst. $35.00pb


The Challenge of Establishing World-Class Universities, by Jamil Salmi. $22.00pb


Distortions to Agricultural Incentives in Africa, edited by Kym Anderson and
William A. Masters. $39.95pb


Improving Transparency, Integrity, and Accountability in Water Supply and
Sanitation, by Maria Gonzalez de Asis, Donal O'Leary, Per Ljung and John
Butterworth. $30.00pb


Moving Out of Poverty, Volume 2: Success from the Bottom Up , by Deepa Narayan,
Lant Pritchett and Soumya Kapoor. $40.00pb


Organization and Performance of Cotton Sectors in Africa: Learning from Reform
Experience, edited by David Tschirley, Colin Poulton, and Patrick Labaste.
$24.95pb


The Role and Impact of Public-Private Partnerships in Education, by Harry
Anthony Patrinos, Felipe Barrera-Osorio and Juliana Guaqueta. $35.00pb


Youth Employment in Sierra Leone: Sustainable Livelihood Opportunities in a
Post-Conflict Setting, by Pia Peeters, Wendy Cunninham, Gayatri Acharya and
Arvil Van Adams. $25.00pb

Emerging States: The Wellspring of a New World Order, edited by Christophe
Jaffrelot. Columbia University Press. $39.50hb


The Godfather Doctrine: A Foreign Policy Parable, by John C. Hulsman and A. Wess
Mitchell. Princeton University Press. $9.95hb


The Great Experiment: The Story of Ancient Empires, Moderen States, and the
Quest for a Global Nation (with a new conclusion: Yes, We Must), by Strobe
Talbott. Simon & Schuster. $18.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Megacommunities: How Leaders of Government, Business and Non-Profits Can Tackle
Today's Global Challenges Together, by Mark Gerencser, Reginald Van Lee,
Fernando Napolitano, and Christopher Kelly. Palgrave Macmillan. $16.95 NEW IN
PAPERBACK!


Michelle Obama in Her Own Words, edited by Lisa Rogak. PublicAffairs. $12.95pb


Nomad's Hotel: Travels in Time and Space, by Cees Nooteboom. Mariner. $13.95pb


Obama's Challenge: America's Economic Crisis and the Power of a Transformative
Presidency, by Robert Kuttner. Chelsea Green. $14.95pb


Superclass: The Global Power Elite and the World They Are Making, by David
Rothkopf. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $16.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


The Tragedy of American Diplomacy, by William Appleman Williams. Norton.
$17.95pb

Coping with Facts: A Skeptic's Guide to the Problem of Development, by Adam
Fforde. Kumarian. $25.95pb


Economic Development and Transition: Thought, Strategy, and Viability, by Justin
Yifu Lin. Cambridge University Press. $25.99pb


One Economics, Many Recipes: Globalization, Institutions, and Economic Growth,
by Dani Rodrik. Princeton University Press. $18.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Reclaiming Value in International Development: The Moral Dimensions of
Development Policy and Practice in Poor Countries, by Chloe Schwenke. Praeger.
$29.95pb


Successes of the International Monetqary Fund: Untold Stories of Cooperation at
Work, edited by Eduard Brau and Ian McDonald. Palgrave Macmillan. $34.95pb


Vault Career Guide to International Development: The Inside Scoop on Jobs in
International Development, by Christopher Miller and the Staff at Vault. Vault.
$29.95pb

The Bounds of Reason: Game Theory and the Unification of the Behavioral Sciences
, by Herbert Gintis. Princeton University Press. $35.00hb


Connections: An Introduction to the Economics of Networks, by Sanjeev Goyal.
Princeton University Press. $24.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Economic Modeling and Inference, by Bent Jesper Christensen and Nicholas M.
Kiefer. Princeton University Press. $49.50hb


The Euro: The Politics of the New Global Currency, by David Marsh. Yale
University Press. $35.00hb


A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Econommic History of the World, by Gregory Clark.
Princeton University Press. $18.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Game Theory Evolving: A Problem-Centered Introduction to Modeling Strategic
Interaction, 2/e, by Herbert Gintis. Princeton University Press. $35.00pb


Greed: Gut Feelings, Growth, and History, by A. F. Robertson. Polity. $24.95pb


An Introduction to Mathematical Analysis for Economic Theory and Econometrics,
by Dean Corbae, Maxwell B. Stinchcombe, and Juraj Zeman. Princeton University
Press. $75.00hb


Modern Microeconomics, by Brajesh Kumar. Global Professional Publishing.
$49.95pb


The Myth of the Free Market: The Role of the State in a Capitalist Economy, by
Mark A. Martinez. Kumarian Press. $24.95pb


Rational Decisions, by Ken Binmore. Princeton University Press. $40.00hb


Theory of Decision under Uncertainty, by Itzhak Gilboa. Cambridge University
Press. $29.99pb


Tocqueville's Political Economy, by Richard Swedberg. Princeton University
Press. $35.00hb


The Value of Money, by Prabhat Patnaik. Princeton University Press. $37.50hb

Blood and Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism, by Michael Burleigh.
HarperCollins. $29.99hb


The Crisis of Islamic Civilization, by Ali A. Allawi. Yale University Press.
$27.50hb


Two Faiths, One Banner: When Muslims Marched with Christians across Europe's
Battlegrounds., by Ian Almond. Harvard University Press. $29.95hb


Worlds at War: The 2,500-Year Struggle Between East and West, by Anthony Pagden.
Random House. $17.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!

A Crime So Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern-Day Slavery, by E. Benjamin
Skinner. Free Press. $16.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Forced to be Good: Why Trade Agreements Boost Human Rights, by Emilie M.
Hafner-Burton. Cornell University Press. $39.95hb


Global Good Samaritans: Human Rights as Foreign Policy., by Alison Brysk. Oxford
University Press. $27.95pb


Human Rights Watch World Report 2009. Sevent Stories Press. $25.00pb


The Rights of Spring: A Memooir of Innocence Abroad, by David Kennedy. Princeton
University Press. $15.95pb

Asset Pricing Theory, by Costis Skiadas. Princeton University Press. $49.50hb


Contagion: The Financial Epidemic That Is Sweeping the Global Economy...and How
to Protect Yourself From It, by John R. Talbott. Wiley. $24.95pb


The Crash of 2008 and What It Means: The New Paradigm for Financial Markets, by
George Soros. PublicAffairs. $14.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!.


Emerging Banking Systems, edited by Paola Bongini, Stefano Chiarlone and
Giovanni Ferri. Palgrave Macmillan. $85.00hb


Getting Off Track: How Government Actions and Interventions Caused, Prolonged,
and Worsened the Financial Crisis, by John B. Taylor. Hoover Press. $14.95hb


Globalization and Systemic Risk, edited by Douglas D. Evanoff, David S.
Hoelscher and George G. Kaufman. World Scientific Publishers. $118.00hb


The Great Financial Crisis: Causes and Consequences, by John Bellamy Foster and
Fred Magdoff. Monthly Review Press. $12.95pb


House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street, by William
D. Cohan. Doubleday. $27.95hb


Indifference Pricing: Theory and Applications, edited by Rene Carmona. Princeton
University Press. $75.00hb


International Finance: Theory into Practice, by Piet Sercu. Princeton University
Press. $85.00hb


The Match King: Ivar Kreuger, the Financial Genius Behind a Century of Wall
Street Scandals, by Frank Partnoy. PublicAffairs. $26.95hb


The Origin and Development of Financial Markets and Institutions: From the
Seventeenth Century to the Present, edited by Jeremy Atack and Larry Neal.
Cambridge University Press. $115.00hb


The Pledge: ASA, Peasant Politics, and Microfinance in the Development of
Bangladesh, by Stuart Rutherford. Oxford University Press. $49.95hb

Achieving High Performance: Essential Managers, by Mike Bourne and Pippa Bourne.
DK Publishing. $8.00pb


Getting Started in Consulting, 3/e, by Alan Weiss. Wiley. $19.95pb


Giving Great Presentations: Prepare, Stay Calm and Deliver in Style, by Drew
Provan. In Easy Steps. $14.99pb


Organized Uncertainty: Designing a World of Risk Management, by Michael Power.
Oxford University Press. $39.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Project Management for Effective Business Change., by John Carroll. In Easy
Steps. $14.99pb


Thinking in Systems: A Primer, by Donella H. Meadows. Chelsea Green. $19.95pb.

Gender, Rights and Development: A Global Sourcebook, edited by Maitrayee
Mukhopadhyay and Shamim Meer. KIT Publishers. $38.95pb


The Politics of Women's Rights in Iran, by Arzoo Osanloo. Princeton University
Press. $22.95pb

Barriers to Democracy: The Other Side of Social Capital in Palestine and the
Arab World, by Amaney A. Jamal. Princeton University Press. $37.50hb


Going Local: Decentralization, Democratization, and the Promise of Good
Governance, by Merilee S. Grindle. Princeton University Press. $19.95pb


Governing Sustainability, edited by W. Neil Adger and Andrew Jordan. Cambridge
University Press. $32.99pb


The Oxford Handbook on the United Nations, edited by Thomas G. Weiss and Sam
Daws. Oxford University Press. $49.95pb


The State of Sovereignty: Territories, Laws, Populations, edited by Douglas
Howland and Luise White. Indiana University Press. $24.95pb

Basic Documents in International Law, edited by Ian Brownlie. Oxford University
Press. $65.00pb


The Birthright Lottery: Citizenship and Global Inequality, by Ayelet Shachar.
Harvard University Press. $39.95hb


General Jurisprudence: Understanding Law from a Global Perspective, by William
Twining. Cambridge University Press. $70.00pb


Prosecuting Heads of State, edited by Ellen L. Lutz and Caitlin Reiger.
Cambridge University Press. $29.99pb

Growing Unequal: Income Distribution and Poverty in OECD Countries. Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development. $108.00pb


Poverty Dynamics: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, edited by Tony Addison, David
Hulme and Ravi Kanbur. Oxford University Press. $39.95pb

Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of
Global Trade, by Rachel Louise Snyder. Norton. $16.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Multilateralizing Regionalism: Challenges for the Global Trading System, edited
by Richard Baldwin and Patrick Low. Cambridge University Press/World Trade
Organization. $55.00pb

Education for All Monitoring Report 2009: Overcoming Inequality: Why Governance
Matters. UNESCO Publishing/Oxford University Press. $35.00pb

China, India and the United States: Competition for Energy Resources. Emirates
Center for Strategic Studies and Research. $97.50hb; $49.50pb


Power Markets and Economics: Energy Costs, Trading, Emissions, by Barrie Murray.
Wiley. $120.00hb


Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy;, by Michael T.
Klare. Henry Holt. $16.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Structuring an Energy Technology Revolution, by Charles Weiss and William B.
Bonvillian. MIT Press. $24.00hb


Wind Energy Pocket Reference, by Peter H. Jensen, Niels L. Meyer, Niels R.
Mortensen, Flemming Oster. Earthscan. $19.95pb

Climate Change: Picturing the Science, by Gavin Schmidt and Joshua Wolfe.
Norton. $24.95pb


Eco Barons: The Dreamers, Schemers, and Millionaires Who Are Saving Our Planet,
by Edward Humes. Ecco Press. $25.99hb


The Environment and World History, edited by Edmund Burke III and Kenneth
Pomeranz. University of California Press. $24.95pb


Fixing Climate Change: What Past Climate Changes Reveal about the Current Threat
- and How to Counter It, by Wallace S. Broecker and Robert Kunzig. Hill & Wang.
$15.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Global Warming and the World Trading System, by Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Steve
Charnovitz and Jisun Kim. Peterson Institute for International Economics.
$23.95pb


Green Volunteers: The World Guide to Voluntary Work in Nature Conservation, 7/e,
edited by Fabio Ausenda. Green Volunteers. $16.95pb


Integral Ecology: Uniting Multiple Perspectives on the Natural World, by Sean
Esbjorn-Hargens and Michael E. Zimmerman. Integral Books. $45.00hb


Sustaining Life: How Human Health Depends on Biodiversity, edited by Eric
Chivian and Aaron Bernstein. Oxford University Press. $34.95hb


The Unnatural History of the Sea, by Callum Roberts. Island Press. $19.95pb


The Vanishing Face of Gaia: A Final Warning, by James Lovelock. Basic Books.
$25.00hb

Birth Models That Work, edited by Robbie E. Davis-Floyd, Leslie Barclay,
Betty-Anne Daviss and Jan Tritten. University of California Press. $27.50pb


Boundaries of Contagion: How Ethnic Politics Have Shaped Government Responses to
AIDS, by Evan S. Lieberman. Princeton University Press. $24.95pb


Case Studies in Food Policy for Developing Countries, Volume 1: Policies for
Health, Nutrition, Food Consumption, and Poverty, edited by Per
Pinstrup-Andersen and Fuzhi Cheng. Cornell University Press. $22.95pb


Case Studies in Food Policy for Developing Countries, Volume 2: Domestic
Policies for Markets, Production, and Environment, edited by Per
Pinstrup-Andersen and Fuzhi Cheng. Cornell University Press. $22.95pb


Case Studies in Food Policy for Developing Countries, Volume 3: Institutions and
International Trade Policies, edited by Per Pinstrup-Andersen and Fuzhi Cheng.
Cornell University Press. $22.95pb


Challenging Health Economics, by Gavin Mooney. Oxford University Press. $74.00hb


Famine: A Short History, by Cormac O Grada. Princeton University Press. $27.95hb


A Line Drawn in the Sand: Responses to the AIDS Treatment Crisis in Africa,
edited by Phyllis J. Kanki and Richard G. Marlink. Harvard Center for Population
and Development Studies. $30.00pb


Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic 2008. UNAIDS. $40.00pb


World of Work Report 2008: Income Inequalities in the Age of Financial
Globalization. International Labour Office. $50.00pb


Corporate Governance: Principles, Policies, and Practices, by Bob Tricker.
Oxford University Press. $70.00pb


The UN and Transnational Corporations: From Code of Conduct to Global Compact,
by Tagi Sagafi-Nejad in collaboration with John H. Dunning. Indiana University
Press. $24.95pb

The Art of Public Strategy: Mobilizing Power and Knowledge for the Common Good,
by Geoff Mulgan. Oxford University Press. $49.95hb

Digital Diasporas: Identity and Transnational Engagement, by Jennifer M.
Brinkerhoff. Cambridge University Press. $24.99pb


Internet Governance: Infrastructure and Institutions, edited by Lee A. Bygrave
and Jon Bing. Oxford University Press. $85.00hb


Knowledge Governance: Processes and Perspectives, edited by Nicolai J. Foss and
Snejina Michailova. Oxford University Press. $99.00hb


The Wikipedia Revolution: How a Bunch of Nobodies Created the World's Greatest
Encyclopedia., by Andrew Lih. Hyperion. $24.99hb

Climate Change Adaptation in the Water Sector, edited by Fulco Ludwig, Pavel
Kabat, Henk van Schaik and Michael van der Valk. Earthscan. 97.50hb


Managing Water Resources: Methods and Tools for a Systems Approach, by Slobodan
P. Simonovic. Earthscan. $77.95pb w/CD-ROM


Planet Water: Investing in the World's Most Valuable Resource, by Steve
Hoffmann. Wiley. $39.95hb


Policy and Strategic Behavior in Water Resource Management, edited by Ariel
Dinar and Jose Albiac. Earthscan. $117.00hb

Africa: The Politics of Suffering and Smiling, by Patrick Chabal. Zed Books.
$29.95pb


Africa Now! Emerging Talents from a Continent on the Move. GSD Art Program.
$12.00pb


Africa's Private Sector: What's Wrong with the Business Environment and What to
Do about It, by Vijaya Ramachandran, Alan Gelb and Manju Kedia Shah. Center for
Global Development. $18.95pb.


Africa's Turn?, by Edward Miguel. MIT Press. $14.95hb


After the Party: Corruption, the ANC and South Africa's Uncertain Future, by
Andrew Feinstein. Verso. $26.95hb


The Antelope's Strategy: Living in Rwanda After the Genocide, by Jean Hatzfeld.
Farrar Straus & Giroux. $25.00hb


Bring Me My Machine Gun: The Battle for the Soul of South Africa from Mandela to
Zuma, by Alec Russell. PublicAffairs. $26.95hb


Class Struggle and Resistance in Africa, edited by Leo Zeilig. Haymarket Books.
$17.00pb


Guns and Governance in the Rift Valley: Pastoralist Conflict and Small Arms, by
Kennedy Agade Mkutu. Indiana University Press. $22.95pb


Killing Neighbors: Webs of Violence in Rwanda, by Lee Ann Fujii. Cornell
University Press. $29.95hb


The Politics of Aid: African Strategies for Dealing with Donors, edited by
Lindsay Whitfield. Oxford University Press. $60.00hb


Saviors and Survivors: Darfur, Politics, and the War on Terror, by Mahmood
Mamdani. Pantheon. $26.95hb

The Bitter Sea: Coming of Age in China Before Mao, by Charles N. Li.
HarperCollins. $14.99pb


China High: My Fast Times in the 010, a Beijing Memoir, by ZZ. St. Martin's
Press. $24.95hb


China's Communist Party: Atrophy and Adaptation, by David Shambaugh. Woodrow
Wilson Center Press/University of California Press. $21.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Dependent Communities: Aid and Politics in Cambodia and East Timor, by Caroline
Hughes. Cornell University Press. $23.95pb


Economic Transitions with Chinese Characteristics: Thirty Years of Reform and
Opening Up, edited by Arthur Sweetman and Jun Zhang. McGill-Queens University
Press. $39.95pb


Economic Transitions with Chinese Characteristics: Social Change During Thirty
Years of Reform, edited by Arthur Sweetman and Jun Zhang. McGill-Queens
University Press. $39.95pb


The Indonesia Reader: History, Culture, Politics, edited by Tineke Hellwig and
Eric Tagliacozzo. Duke University Press. $25.95pb


Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya: Negotiating Urban Space in Malaysia , by Ross King.
University of Hawai'i Press. $36.00pb


The Rise of China and the Demise of the Capitalist World Economy, by Minqi Li.
Monthly Review Press. $16.95pb


The State in Myanmar, by Robert H. Taylor. University of Hawai'i Press. $28.00pb

Armenian Golgotha: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1918, by Grigoris
Balakian. Alfred A. Knopf. $35.00hb


The European Union Explained: Institutions, Actors, Global Impact, by Andreas
Staab. Indiana University Press. $19.95pb


The Last Days of Europe: Epitaph for a Continent, by Walter Laqueur. Thomas
Dunne Books. $14.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Montenegro: A Modern History, by Kenneth Morrison. I. B. Tauris. $49.95hb


The News from Ireland: Foreign Correspondents and the Irish Revolution., by
Maurice Walsh. I. B. Tauris. $49.95hb

Forgotten Continent: The Battle for Latin America's Soul, by Michael Reid. Yale
University Press. $20.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!.


The Obama Administration and the Americas: Agenda for Change, edited by Abraham
F. Lowenthal, Theodore J. Piccone and Laurence Whitehead. Brookings Institution
Press. $28.95pb

Blood and Belief: The PKK and the Kurdish Fight for Independence, by Aliza
Marcus. New York University Press. $22.00pb


The Confrontation: Winning the War Against Future Jihad, by Walid Phares.
Palgrave Macmillan. $16.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!.


Engaging Iran and Building Peace in the Persian Gulf Region, by Volker Perthes,
Ray Tanakh and Hitoshi Tanaka. The Trilateral Commission. $15.00pb


Engaging the Muslim World, by Juan Cole. Palgrave Macmillan. $26.95hb


Hezbollah: A Short History, by Augustus Richard Norton. Princeton University
Press. $12.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


In Arabian Nights: A Caravan of Moroccan Dreams, by Tahir Shah. Bantam Books.
$13.00 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Iraq: A Political History from Independence to Occupation, by Adeed Dawisha.
Princeton University Press. $29.95hb


Kurdistan: Crafting of National Selves, by Christopher Houston. Indiana
University Press. $27.95pb


The North African Military Balance: Force Developments in the Maghreb, by
Anthony H. Cordesman and Aram Nerguizian. CSIS. $22.95pb


The Persian Night: Iran Under the Khomeinist Revolution, by Amir Tehani.
Encounter Books. $25.95hb


We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land: A Plan That Will Work, by Jimmy Carter.
Simon & Schuster. $27.00hb

A History of Bangladesh, by Willem van Schendel. Cambridge University Press.
$24.99pb


A Hundred Horizons: The Indian Ocean in the Age of Global Empire, by Sugata
Bose. Harvard University Press. $18.95 NEW IN PAPERBACK!


Imagining India: The Idea of a Renewed Nation, by Nandan Nilekani. The Penguin
Press. $29.95hb


India's Global Powerhouses: How They Are Taking on the World, by Nirmalya Kumar
with Pradipta K. Mohapatra and Suj Chandrasekhar. Harvard Business Press.
$27.95hb

Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to
the Present, by Christopher I. Beckwith. Princeton University Press. $35.00hb

The American Heritage Dictionary of Business Terms, by David L. Scott. Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt. $15.95pb.


Washington Internships: How to Get Them and Use Them to Lauch Your Public Policy
Career, by Deirdre Martinez. University of Pennsylvania Press. $19.95pb

The Cellist of Sarajevo, by Steven Galloway. Riverhead Books. $15.00pb


Leaving Tangier, by Tahar Ben Jelloun. Penguin. $15.00pb


Morning and Evening Talk, by Naguib Mahfouz. Anchor Books. $13.95 NEW IN
PAPERBACK!


Wolf Totem, by Jiang Rong. Penguin. $15.00pb

M Is for Mexico., by Flor de Maria Cordero. Frances Lincoln. $16.95hb

Travel Wise: How to Be Safe, Savvy and Secure Abroad, by Ray S. Leki.
Intercultural Press. $22.95pb


World Bank titles are available to staff at a 30% discount

Monday, April 13, 2009

REMINDER: Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai, Bruce Babbitt, and Thomas Friedman discuss "When Nature's Forces Meet Degraded Environments" on Tuesday, April 14th at 2:00 PM in IFC auditorium

The Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR)
Distinguished Seminar Series

(Embedded image moved to file: pic05030.jpg)


PRESENTER
Wangari Maathai
Founder, The Greenbelt Movement & 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Ms. Maathai became the first African woman to receive the Nobel
Peace Prize in 2004 for her contribution to sustainable development,
democracy, and peace. Ms. Maathai, who was born in Nyeri, Kenya, is
the first woman in East and Central Africa to earn a doctorate
degree. She was active in the National Council of Women of Kenya in
1976-87 and was its chairman in 1981-87. It was while she served in
the National Council of Women that she introduced the idea of
planting trees with the people in 1976 and continued to develop it
into a broad-based, grassroots organization, whose main focus is the
planting of trees with women groups in order to conserve the
environment and improve their quality of life. Through her work with
the Green Belt Movement, she has assisted these groups in planting
more than 20 million trees on their farms, schools, and church
compounds. Her new book, The Challenge for Africa, will be released
in April 2009.

DISCUSSANTS
Bruce Babbitt
Chairman of the Board, World Wildlife Fund
Former U.S. Secretary of the Interior and Governor of Arizona
Mr. Babbitt is Chairman of the Board at the World Wildlife Fund. He
formerly served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior from 1993 to
2001, leading the country in landmark efforts, including the
creation of a forest plan for the Pacific Northwest, restoration of
the Florida Everglades, passage of the California Desert Protection
Act, and legislation for the National Wildlife Refuge System. Before
President Clinton appointed him to national service, Mr. Babbitt
served as Governor of Arizona from 1978 to 1987 and as Attorney
General of the state from 1975 to 1978. He wrote Cities in the
Wilderness: A New Vision of Land Use in America (2005), where he
lays out a new vision of land use in America, addressing a breadth
of issues from protection of the Everglades to restoration of tall
grass prairie in Iowa to water development in Arizona, wolf
restoration in Yellowstone, grazing rights in the Southwest, and dam
removal across the country.

Thomas Friedman
Foreign Affairs Columnist, The New York Times
Mr. Friedman, a world-renowned author and journalist, joined The New
York Times in 1981. He won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for commentary,
his third Pulitzer for The New York Times. He has reported on the
Middle East conflict, the end of the cold war, U.S. domestic
politics, foreign policy and international economics. He has
authored a number of books, including The Lexus and the Olive Tree:
Understanding Globalization (1999) and The World is Flat: A Brief
History of the Twenty-first Century (2005). His latest book, Hot,
Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--and How It Can
Renew America (2008), brings a fresh outlook to the crises of
destabilizing climate change and rising competition for energy.

MODERATOR
Apurva Sanghi
Senior Economist, Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and
Recovery, World Bank
Mr. Sanghi is leading the ongoing World Bank?UN Assessment on the
Economics of Disaster Risk Reduction. This event is part of a
distinguished seminar series designed to contribute ideas by
individuals such as Kenneth Arrow, Freeman Dyson, Daniel Kahneman,
Howard Kunreuther, William Nordhaus, Richard Posner, Thomas
Schelling, Martin Weitzman, and others on selected themes of the
World Bank?UN Assessment. The next speaker is Edward Prescott, the
2004 Economics Nobel Laureate, on April 24. For more information
about the Assessment, please contact Mr. Sanghi at
asanghi@worldbank.org.


About The Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery
(GFDRR)
GFDRR is a partnership of the International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction (ISDR) system to support the implementation of the Hyogo
Framework for Action (HFA). The HFA, endorsed by the United Nations
General Assembly in Resolution 60/195, is the primary international
agreement for disaster reduction. One hundred sixty-eight (168)
countries and multilateral organizations including the World Bank
and the United Nations (UN) system participated in the UN World
Conference on Disaster Reduction in Kobe, Hyogo, Japan in January
2005. The principal strategic goal of the HFA is to effectively
integrate, in a coherent manner, disaster risk considerations into
sustainable development policies, planning, programming, and
financing at all levels of government.
For more information, visit GFDRR.org.

About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.

REMINDER: Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai, Bruce Babbitt, and Thomas Friedman discuss "When Nature's Forces Meet Degraded Environments" on Tuesday, April 14th at 2:00 PM in IFC auditorium

The Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR)
Distinguished Seminar Series

(Embedded image moved to file: pic08177.jpg)


PRESENTER
Wangari Maathai
Founder, The Greenbelt Movement & 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Ms. Maathai became the first African woman to receive the Nobel
Peace Prize in 2004 for her contribution to sustainable development,
democracy, and peace. Ms. Maathai, who was born in Nyeri, Kenya, is
the first woman in East and Central Africa to earn a doctorate
degree. She was active in the National Council of Women of Kenya in
1976-87 and was its chairman in 1981-87. It was while she served in
the National Council of Women that she introduced the idea of
planting trees with the people in 1976 and continued to develop it
into a broad-based, grassroots organization, whose main focus is the
planting of trees with women groups in order to conserve the
environment and improve their quality of life. Through her work with
the Green Belt Movement, she has assisted these groups in planting
more than 20 million trees on their farms, schools, and church
compounds. Her new book, The Challenge for Africa, will be released
in April 2009.

DISCUSSANTS
Bruce Babbitt
Chairman of the Board, World Wildlife Fund
Former U.S. Secretary of the Interior and Governor of Arizona
Mr. Babbitt is Chairman of the Board at the World Wildlife Fund. He
formerly served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior from 1993 to
2001, leading the country in landmark efforts, including the
creation of a forest plan for the Pacific Northwest, restoration of
the Florida Everglades, passage of the California Desert Protection
Act, and legislation for the National Wildlife Refuge System. Before
President Clinton appointed him to national service, Mr. Babbitt
served as Governor of Arizona from 1978 to 1987 and as Attorney
General of the state from 1975 to 1978. He wrote Cities in the
Wilderness: A New Vision of Land Use in America (2005), where he
lays out a new vision of land use in America, addressing a breadth
of issues from protection of the Everglades to restoration of tall
grass prairie in Iowa to water development in Arizona, wolf
restoration in Yellowstone, grazing rights in the Southwest, and dam
removal across the country.

Thomas Friedman
Foreign Affairs Columnist, The New York Times
Mr. Friedman, a world-renowned author and journalist, joined The New
York Times in 1981. He won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for commentary,
his third Pulitzer for The New York Times. He has reported on the
Middle East conflict, the end of the cold war, U.S. domestic
politics, foreign policy and international economics. He has
authored a number of books, including The Lexus and the Olive Tree:
Understanding Globalization (1999) and The World is Flat: A Brief
History of the Twenty-first Century (2005). His latest book, Hot,
Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--and How It Can
Renew America (2008), brings a fresh outlook to the crises of
destabilizing climate change and rising competition for energy.

MODERATOR
Apurva Sanghi
Senior Economist, Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and
Recovery, World Bank
Mr. Sanghi is leading the ongoing World Bank?UN Assessment on the
Economics of Disaster Risk Reduction. This event is part of a
distinguished seminar series designed to contribute ideas by
individuals such as Kenneth Arrow, Freeman Dyson, Daniel Kahneman,
Howard Kunreuther, William Nordhaus, Richard Posner, Thomas
Schelling, Martin Weitzman, and others on selected themes of the
World Bank?UN Assessment. The next speaker is Edward Prescott, the
2004 Economics Nobel Laureate, on April 24. For more information
about the Assessment, please contact Mr. Sanghi at
asanghi@worldbank.org.


About The Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery
(GFDRR)
GFDRR is a partnership of the International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction (ISDR) system to support the implementation of the Hyogo
Framework for Action (HFA). The HFA, endorsed by the United Nations
General Assembly in Resolution 60/195, is the primary international
agreement for disaster reduction. One hundred sixty-eight (168)
countries and multilateral organizations including the World Bank
and the United Nations (UN) system participated in the UN World
Conference on Disaster Reduction in Kobe, Hyogo, Japan in January
2005. The principal strategic goal of the HFA is to effectively
integrate, in a coherent manner, disaster risk considerations into
sustainable development policies, planning, programming, and
financing at all levels of government.
For more information, visit GFDRR.org.

About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.