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Notes
1.UN Millennium Project. 2004a.
“Task Force 3 Interim Report on
Primary Education.” New York:
UN Millennium Project. Web site:
www.unmillenniumproject.org/
documents/tf3genderinterim.pdf,
last accessed 2 June 2004; and UN
Millennium Project. 2004b. “Interim
Report of Task Force 4 on Child Health
and Maternal Health. New York:
UN Millennium Project. Web site:
www.unmillenniumproject.org/
documents/tf4interim.pdf, last
accessed 2 June 2004.
2.Hakkert, R., and G. Martine. 2003.
“Population, Poverty and Inequality:
A Latin American Perspective.”
Ch. 6 in: Population and Poverty:
Achieving Equity, Equality and
Sustainability, edited by UNFPA.
Population and Development
Strategies Series. No. 8. New York:
UNFPA.
3. Eastwood, R., and M. Lipton. 2001.
“Demographic Transition and
Poverty: Effects Via Economic
Growth, Distribution and
Conversion.” Ch. 9 in: Population
Matters: Demographic Change,
Economic Growth, and Poverty in
the Developing World, edited by
N. Birdsall, A. C. Kelley, and
S. W. Sinding. 2001. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
4. National Research Council. 1986.
Population Growth and Economic
Development: Policy Questions.
Washington D.C.: National
Academy Press.
5. RAND Corporation. 2002. “Banking
the ‘Demographic Dividend’: How
Population Dynamics Can Affect
Economic Growth.” Population
Matters Policy Brief. No. RB-5065-
WFHF/DLPF/RF. Santa Monica,
California: RAND Corporation;
Bloom, D. E., D. Canning, and
J. Sevilla. 2003. The Demographic
Dividend: A New Perspective on the
Economic Consequences of Population
Change. RAND Population Matters
Monograph Series. Santa Monica,
California: RAND Corporation;
Paes de Barros, R., et al. 2001.
“Demographic Changes and Poverty
in Brazil.” Ch. 11 in: Population
Matters: Demographic Change,
Economic Growth, and Poverty in
the Developing World, edited by
N. Birdsall, A. C. Kelley, and
S. W. Sinding. 2001. Oxford:
Oxford University Press; Bloom, D. E.,
D. Canning, and J. Sevilla. 2002.
Demographic Change and Economic
Growth: The Importance of Age
Structure. Santa Monica, California:
RAND Corporation; Seltzer, J. 2002.
The Origins and Evolution of Family
Planning Programs in Developing
Countries. Santa Monica, California:
RAND Corporation; Cassen, R. 1994.
Population and Development: Old
Debates, New Conclusions. New
Brunswick, New Jersey, and Oxford:
Transaction Publishers; and
Lassonde, L. 1996. Coping with
Population Challenges. London:
Earthscan Publications.
6. The World Bank. Global
Poverty Monitoring web site:
www.worldbank.org/research/
povmonitor/index.htm, last
accessed 18 May 2004.
7. This and the following paragraphs
rely heavily on: UNFPA. 2002.
The State of World Population 2002:
People, Poverty and Possibilities:
Making Development Work for the
Poor. New York: UNFPA.
8. United Nations. 2003. The
HIV/AIDS Epidemic and Its Social
and Economic Implications
(UN/POP/MORT/2003/12).
New York: Population Division,
Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, United Nations.
9. National Research Council. 2001.
Preparing for an Aging World: The
Case for Cross-National Research.
Washington, D.C.: National
Academy Press.
10. UNFPA. 2004. Investing in People:
National Progress in Implementing the
ICPD Programme of Action. New York:
UNFPA.
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