Latest Articles

Published by Davao Today | By Keith Bacongco | Tuesday, May 30, 2006

What was once a farming village of indigenous peoples is now a vast coffee plantation that straddles six towns in three provinces. The plantation prevents the T'boli villagers from expanding their own farmland.

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Published by Canadian Press | By | Monday, May 29, 2006

The development of a potentially rare and lucrative platinum mine near a reserve in Northern Ontario has prompted a First Nation to sue the provincial government while it faces a $10 billion lawsuit from a Canadian exploration company.

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Published by Associated Press/News 14 Carolina | By | Thursday, May 25, 2006

North Carolina health officials urged closer communication between the state's agriculture, labor and health departments and stricter enforcement of pesticide laws after three severely deformed children were born to migrant farmworkers.

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Published by The New York Times | By David S. Cloud | Wednesday, May 24, 2006

A Defense Department investigation of Pentagon-financed propaganda efforts in Iraq warns that paying Iraqi journalists to produce positive stories could damage American credibility and calls for an end to military payments to a group of Iraqi journalists in Baghdad, according to a summary of the investigation.

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Published by The New York Times | By Julie Creswell | Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Every October, some 50 former Home Depot managers, calling themselves the Former Orange-Blooded Executives, after the home-improvement chain's trademark bright orange color, gather in Atlanta to reminisce, chat about new jobs and pass around pictures of their children.

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Published by Special to CorpWatch | By Nityanand Jayaraman | Wednesday, May 24, 2006

The Tata Group, one of India's biggest and oldest multinationals, has taken over tribal land to build an enormous steel plant in Orissa. A clash between the traditional owners of the land and the police has resulted in numerous injuries and deaths, calling into the question the prestigious family-owned company's philanthropic image.

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Published by Salon.com | By Andrew Leonard | Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Tobacco consumption in the developed world is flat or declining, but it is booming worldwide, boosted by the removal of tariffs and other restrictions on trade that have been an integral part of globalization. But, tobacco, as its critics like to point out, is not like most other products - it's "the only legal consumer product that kills half of its regular users." So, naturally, governments are wont to regulate it.

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Published by The New York Times | By Alan Cowell | Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Amnesty International today assailed the United States' use of military contractors in Iraq as "war outsourcing" and said the behavior of some contractors had diminished America's moral standing.

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Published by Associated Press | By | Tuesday, May 23, 2006

One of Wal-Mart's most vocal union-funded critics took out a full-page ad in The New York Times on Tuesday calling on the company to live up to the ''moral responsibilities'' of being the world's largest private employer by improving wages and health insurance.

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