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GLOBAL 3000: The Globalization Program

GLOBAL 3000 – DW-TV’s new globalisation magazine looks at the issues that are moving us today, and shows how people are living with the opportunities and risks of globalisation. GLOBAL 3000 gives globalisation a face. During the Kosovo War nine years ago, many of the ...

GLOBAL 3000 – DW-TV’s new globalisation magazine looks at the issues that are moving us today, and shows how people are living with the opportunities and risks of globalisation. GLOBAL 3000 gives globalisation a face. During the Kosovo War nine years ago, many of the people from Pristina fled abroad. One of them is Naim Bunjuka. Naim Bunjaku is a radio host, journalist, and singer who lives and works in Pristina, Kosovo. We asked him what globalization means to him, what he hopes the future will bring, and what keeps him up at night.

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    Moldova - Export Markets Driving Environmental Protection

    Organic farming can pay - that's what environmentalists are telling ...

    Organic farming can pay - that's what environmentalists are telling the farmers of Moldova. Once the orchard of the Soviet Union, now the little republic is the poorhouse of Europe. Its traditional agriculture is in crisis. The NGO Pro Rural Invest is promoting organic farming methods for organic produce. Moldova has a lot to gain from making its agriculture sustainable. Organic farming enhances biodiversity; national parks attract tourists. The biggest challenge the still young organic sector faces is to produce in line with European Union standards.

    Sep 7, 2015 Read more
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    UN Millennium Project: The Sauri Millennium Village

    Despite the billions in aid poured into Africa in recent ...

    Despite the billions in aid poured into Africa in recent decades, the results have been ambiguous. The UN’s Millennium Villages project is meant to bring about real change. Sauri in Kenya was among the villages chosen for the project in 2004. New technical input and incentives have been introduced to fruitful effect. The distribution of mosquito nets and meals at schools has seen pupil numbers double. Project staff also donate fertilizer so that farmers can boost their harvests and invest in the more lucrative business of vegetable production.

    Sep 7, 2015 Read more
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    Living Room: Fiji

    Paulina Bibi invites us into her living room on Fiji. ...

    Paulina Bibi invites us into her living room on Fiji. Aside from the TV, life in this Catholic household center around their faith.

    Aug 31, 2015 Read more
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    Biodiversity: Zanzibar

    As fish stocks in the seas off Zanzibar dwindle, so, ...

    As fish stocks in the seas off Zanzibar dwindle, so, too, do the earnings of local fishermen. Selling coral and sea sponges offer an alternative. They're popular souvenirs among tourists. The NGO marinecultures.org has been helping the fishermen to learn aquafarming. This also discourages poaching on the coral reefs. And researchers are looking at sea sponges in the hope of finding agents effective against cancer and viral infections.

    Aug 31, 2015 Read more
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    Biodiversity in Paraguay: Subsistance farming in the shadow of soy plantations

    Sustainably and in harmony with nature: indigenous farmers in Paraguay ...

    Sustainably and in harmony with nature: indigenous farmers in Paraguay are trying to maintain their traditional lifestyle, without chemicals, but with the aid of time-honored knowledge of flora and fauna.It's a difficult battle, because in Paraguay soy plantations and deforestation are increasing. 3.5 million hectares of soy fields now stretch across the country. That has an impact on biodiversity, also puts a huge water resource under threat: the Guarani Aquifer, the world's largest natural subterranean water reservoir. The Global Forest Coalition, and international coalition of NGOs and indigenous communities, wants to help. It's supporting the farmers in their efforts to preserve and protect what remains of the natural environment.

    Aug 24, 2015 Read more
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    Baltimore: Spiral of violence

    Baltimore is one of the poorest and most dangerous cities ...

    Baltimore is one of the poorest and most dangerous cities in the US. Its murder rate is one of the highest in the country. The Safe Streets organization cooperates with social workers to reach teenagers on the streets and intervene in violent situations. Where it's active, the murder rate has dropped significantly.

    Aug 24, 2015 Read more
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    DR Congo: The illegal trade in raw materials

    How can we keep our mobile phones, laptops and jewelry ...

    How can we keep our mobile phones, laptops and jewelry from helping fund wars? In the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the illegal trade with highly-desirable minerals such as coltan, tungsten and gold has contributed to helping rebel groups maintain their terrorist attacks against the population.That's why the European Parliament wants to compel those who import such raw materials to disclose their entire chain of supply. In addition, the United Nations, together with international partners, has significantly increased its inspection of mines in the region.

    Aug 24, 2015 Read more
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    Benin: On the Trail of a Rare Bird

    Researchers estimate that there are between eight and 30 million ...

    Researchers estimate that there are between eight and 30 million animal species that have not yet been discovered. But many are already endangered, like the Anambra waxbill, an African bird about 12 centimeters long that belongs to the family of estrildid finches. A team of researchers from France has traveled to the western African country of Benin to find out more about these birds. At the heart of one of the largest wetlands in southern Benin, a team of ornithologists is gathering data about this rare bird species. They had previously only seen the species in Nigeria, where it has almost completely disappeared due to increasing pollution and deforestation.

    Aug 10, 2015 Read more
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    Myanmar: The Business of Opium

    Although opium production is banned in Myanmar, farming of opium ...

    Although opium production is banned in Myanmar, farming of opium poppies has been increasing in recent years- According to the UNODC, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, it went up by 13 percent in 2013 alone, making Myanmar the second-largest producer of opium after Afghanistan. Ninety percent of the opium poppies are grown in Shan State, in the eastern part of the country, which is in the Golden Triangle on the borders with Laos and Thailand. Some 200,000 households live off of income from opium poppies. Growing mangos or avocados is no longer profitable, because transport costs have become too expensive.

    Aug 10, 2015 Read more
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    Living Room: Cuba

    Although it's recently become easier for ordinary Cubans to travel ...

    Although it's recently become easier for ordinary Cubans to travel abroad legally, most simply can not afford to do so. 82 year-old Gabriel Calaforra is an exception. He spent his career globe-trotting, having served as a diplomat for the Cuban government as well as for the United Nations. He's lived and loved on every continent on the globe, and he speaks several languages - an international Cuban.

    Aug 10, 2015 Read more
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