In the Taklimakan Desert of Xinjiang, China, dunes shift as much as 20 meters each year due to powerful and relentless winds. The dunes creep across the land, consuming the environment and deepening the struggles of those living in poverty. But China is fighting back. The Green Wall of China combats poverty by pushing back the desert and restoring both land and livelihoods.
On November 28, 2024, the final stretch of the desert met its match. The last 100 meters of shifting sand along the southern edge of the Taklimakan Desert was planted with various seedlings like red willows, saxaul and desert poplar, sealing the gap in what is now a 3,046-kilometer-long green barrier. With that, the Green Wall stands as a living shield against desertification and poverty.
Drivers of Desertification in China
Desertification is “the transformation of fertile land into desert or arid waste” due to a combination of natural and human factors. Shifting climatic and weather patterns can intensify wind speeds and soil erosion, accelerating the spread of desertification. Human-driven climate change has intensified the problem. Specifically, China’s rapidly growing population has placed immense pressure on natural resources, with rising consumption leading to land degradation and creating conditions that allow desertification to swiftly creep up.
The Three North Shelterbelt System
Otherwise known as the Green Wall of China, the Three North Shelterbelt System is one of China’s most significant ecological and economic initiatives. The project carries calculated responsibilities such as improving the ecological environment, mitigating natural disasters and expanding habitable and arable land. These activities have led to its recognition as a key national project.
Beyond environmental goals, it also plays a role in enhancing production conditions, reducing regional disparities and fostering shared prosperity among all ethnic groups. Additionally, the Green Wall of China combats poverty by supporting the restructuring of rural industries, accelerates poverty alleviation among farmers and contributes to long-term sustainable economic and social development.
After generations of sustained effort, the Three North Shelterbelt System has completed afforestation and conservation work across 31.7429 million hectares. As a result, forest coverage in the project area increased from 5.05% in 1977 to 13.84% by 2020.
The initiative created the “Great Green Wall” along China’s northern frontier— serving as a barrier against wind and sand, conserving water and soil, protecting agriculture and supporting animal husbandry and has achieved ecological, economic and social benefits.
Protecting the People and Lands
According to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Forestry and Grassland Bureau, the successful completion of the Green Wall along the Taklimakan Desert will enhance the region’s ecological barrier, stabilize agricultural production, improve urban living conditions and support both economic and social development.
Expanding tree cover helps stabilize water supplies, absorb carbon dioxide and offer communities sustainable access to resources like timber and other forest products. China has adopted scientific sand control technologies, including engineering sand fixation, biological sand control and photovoltaic sand control. While stabilizing and preventing the spread of sand, these efforts have also supported the development of local, sand-based industries– helping to improve lives and boost regional economies.
Looking ahead, Xinjiang plans to further build upon and strengthen the “edge-locking” efforts, contributing to the construction of a robust ecological security barrier in northern China.
How The Green Wall of China Combats Poverty
Along with the hardships of desertification, farmers were uneasy about losing their sole source of income and falling into poverty as the desert expanded. Their fears have been eased through local government subsidies and additional employment opportunities.
The Chinese government launched the “Returning Farmland to Forest Program,” also known as “Grain for Green.” This initiative provided financial incentives to farmers to cease cultivation on vulnerable land and instead plant trees. The program has a dual purpose: first, to reduce soil erosion and prevent further flooding; and second, to ensure that farmers’ quality of life continues to improve, even with the loss of arable farmland. In return for the protection of the newly planted trees, farmers received subsidies, as well as land rights to the fields and terraces that they managed.
The amount of compensation varies based on location and the type of land cultivated; however, according to the State Forestry Administration, the average household receives no less than 9,000 yuan, or $1,253. Households engaged in the program receive payments directly to their bank accounts after forestry officers conduct annual inspections of their forest plots.
Employment Diversification
In addition to providing subsidies, the Returning Farmland to Forest Program has helped diversify employment opportunities and broaden the industrial base in impoverished areas. A study conducted by four Chinese universities examining the program’s long-term impact on rural economic development found that there was a 10.9% increase in the value generated by local primary sectors, compared to similar counties that did not participate. Furthermore, rural employment in agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry and fishing rose by 8.2%.
The Three-North Shelterbelt System holds the title of the Green Wall of China and with it, the aid for poverty. The project has enhanced the region’s ecological environment, boosted grain production and achieved progress in developing forest product bases. Through the growth of forest and fruit-related industries, the project has helped lift tens of millions of local residents out of poverty.
The project has generated a wide range of job opportunities in areas such as tree planting and land maintenance, offering stable sources of income for local communities. This rise in employment has elevated living standards and stimulated economic growth in rural and impoverished regions.
The restoration of arable land has revitalized agriculture, allowing farmers to improve crop yields and diversify their production. The benefits of the Green Wall are evident in the rise of agricultural productivity, which has bolstered food security and aid for poverty. In 2023 alone, forest-related industries in China generated an annual output of 8.04 trillion yuan, exceeded $180 billion in forest product trade and directly employed 60 million people across the country.
Other Poverty Alleviation Initiatives
The Green Wall of China was among the first large-scale projects to link environmental restoration with poverty reduction, but it is not the only one. The following are other poverty alleviation initiatives:
- The Natural Forest Protection Project (1998). Aims to protect natural forests by stopping commercial logging to preserve ecological balance and biodiversity. To offset income loss, farmers and communities receive subsidies, while funds support forest conservation, habitat restoration and wildlife protection for long-term sustainability.
- The South China Slopes Land Conversion Program (2002). Targets soil erosion on steep slopes in southern China by promoting the restoration of forests and grassland. Goals to reduce landslide risk, improve water retention, enhance ecosystem resilience and encourage sustainable land management for ecological stability.
- The Ant-Forest Program (2011). Created by Ant Financial and the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP), the app is connected to Alipay and rewards users with “green energy points” for eco-friendly actions. These points lead to the planting of virtual and real trees in degraded areas of China. The app encourages user engagement through tracking, competition and sharing, making environmental conservation interactive and rewarding.
Looking Ahead
The Green Wall of China shows how large-scale environmental projects can restore fragile ecosystems while improving livelihoods. By combining ecological restoration with poverty alleviation, China’s afforestation programs have created jobs, strengthened food security and offered long-term stability to millions. As these efforts expand, the Green Wall stands as a model of how investment in nature can build resilience against both environmental and economic challenges.
– Gabriella Luneau
Gabriella is based in Raleigh, NC, USA and focuses on Good News and Global Health for The Borgen Project.
Photo: Flickr
4 Key Innovations in Poverty Eradication in Paraguay
Since the fall of the dictatorship in 1989, a strong implementation of macro-economic policies, market reform and social programs have driven significant growth and lifted millions out of poverty. Nonetheless, inequality still remains stagnant amongst Paraguayans. The World Bank Group has issued four key recommendations to improve poverty: invest in human capital, create quality jobs, strengthen the fiscal system and increase climate resilience. Here are four key innovations in poverty eradication in Paraguay.
1. Investment in Human Capital
Education reform is at the center of Paraguay’s long-term anti-poverty strategy. The OECD’s Paraguay Country Program, officially launched in March 2025, lists improving teacher training as a top priority. Experts see better-trained teachers as essential to raising learning standards and preparing students for the job market.
One example is Tikichuela: Mathematics in My School, an online program designed to support teachers in helping primary students develop math skills. A Berkeley study found that Tikichuela has successfully narrowed the learning gap between low- and high-performing students in Paraguay. According to the study, 65% of students do not have the minimum proficient standards in mathematics, science and reading, making such teacher-supported programs vital. The initiative, which currently benefits 4,000 students in Paraguay, highlights how equipping teachers with the right tools and training enables them to deliver more effective learning. Building on this success, in 2017 the Paraguayan government announced plans to expand funding for Tikichuela at a national scale.
2. ‘Poverty Spotlight’ – Fundación Paraguaya
Social innovator Martin Burt developed Poverty Spotlight, a self-assessment tool that helps families, organizations and NGOs to assess their poverty levels on a holistic level. This innovation uses a metric of 50 indicators across six dimensions including: Income & Employment, Health & Environment, Housing & Infrastructure, Education & Culture, Organization & Participation and Interiority & Motivational. This creates a personalized ‘life map’ for individuals to understand their state of poverty and how best to overcome it.
The system uses a traffic-light color code: Red (extreme poverty), Yellow (poverty) and Green (not poverty). Staff works directly with the people, designing tailored plans to overcome their challenges. Families and individuals track their progress over time, moving from red to green with the support from local mentors and community. Since 2013, 100 public and private businesses in Paraguay have adopted the tool to improve employee well-being, reaching more than 15,000 workers and their families.
In 2021, the United Nations awarded Poverty Spotlight the ODS Recognition (Sustainable Development Goals) for its work dedicated towards ending poverty.
3. Creating Job Opportunities
Fundación Paraguaya runs several programs to help individuals gain key skills and find secure work. Here are some of its innovative programs that are aiding poverty eradication in Paraguay:
Unemployment hit a record high of 8.55% in June 2021, but has since fallen to 5.7%. These innovations support Paraguay’s broader goal of eradicating poverty by fostering entrepreneurship and expanding economic participation.
4. Investing in Climate Resilience
Paraguay is one of the world’s leaders in clean energy production, generating 99.9% of its electricity from zero-carbon hydropower infrastructure. Thanks to its efficient dams, the country is able to produce more than it consumes. It exports the surplus to its neighboring countries Argentina and Brazil. These exports account for 7.1% of Paraguay’s net GDP, serving as a major source of public funding revenue that can be put towards social programs aimed at further reducing poverty.
However, a Berkeley study warns that the country’s climate shocks affect the success of its electricity export. A previous drought reduced export revenues by 12%, reducing the funds available for infrastructure, education and job creation, all of which are critical in reducing poverty in Paraguay.
Looking Ahead
Paraguay’s combination of education reform, innovative poverty measurement, job creation programs and climate conscious economic infrastructure shows how targeted strategies can reduce poverty in sustainable ways. The four key innovations in poverty eradication in Paraguay are key players in bringing the country forward.
– Ashley Pfeifer
Photo: Unsplash
UAE Sends Aid To Help in Fight Against Cholera in Chad
However, to put them in perspective, the number of infections is nearly four times the capacity of Michigan Stadium, the largest stadium in the U.S. The death toll is equally staggering, approaching one and a half times the number of lives lost in the September 11 attacks.
What is Cholera?
Cholera is a bacterial disease that causes severe diarrhea. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), mild cholera cases can be easily treated with oral rehydration solutions, which replace lost fluids and electrolytes. More extreme cases may require intravenous fluids and antibiotics. Cholera can be fatal if not treated quickly, though if caught in time, treatment is very effective.
Cholera is a waterborne disease, meaning it is primarily spread through contaminated water sources. This fact is particularly sobering in Chad, where only 52% of the population can access clean drinking water. The situation is even more dire in rural areas, where that number drops to just 43.8%.
Cholera in Chad
This global outbreak has hit Chad, a country in north-central Africa, especially hard. Chad has a population of more than 19 million, with 44.8% living on an income below the national poverty line. From July 13 to August 19, Chad recorded 776 cholera cases and 53 deaths, with a case fatality rate of 6.8%.
The disease is believed to have entered Chad from its eastern neighbor, Sudan. Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a violent civil war that has devastated the country. According to the United Nations (U.N.), the ongoing conflict has triggered a massive refugee crisis, forcing approximately 1.2 million Sudanese to flee across the border into Chad in search of safety and stability.
The cholera outbreak has been further worsened by these cross-border movements and the instability caused by the war. Armed conflict often exacerbates disease spread, making it essential to focus on this region now to prevent outbreaks and further human suffering.
UAE Involvement
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is a small but wealthy country on the Arabian Peninsula. In August 2025, its government sent 30 tons of lifesaving medical supplies to Chad to combat the cholera outbreak.
Dr. Tareq Ahmed Al Ameri, the chairman of the UAE Aid Agency, confirmed that Emirati President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s priority is to continue the country’s “international humanitarian commitment to address health challenges wherever they arise.”
In 2025 alone, the UAE has distributed more than $80 million in health-related aid worldwide, with the primary beneficiaries in West Asia and Africa.
Conclusion
Efforts to contain cholera in Chad are critical. The UAE’s contribution is a meaningful step in the fight against cholera, offering critical relief to one of the regions hit hardest by the outbreak. However, millions remain at risk due to limited access to clean water, basic health care and humanitarian support.
– William Brentani
Photo: Flickr
Addressing the Gender Wage Gap in Azerbaijan
Decline of the Amazons-women
The history of Azerbaijan reveals that the country was once home to “Amazons-women,” a term used to describe women who possessed the best qualities traditionally attributed to men. Monuments in Azerbaijan commemorate successful women such as Queen Tomris and Queen Nushaba.
However, as history unfolded, Soviet rule suppressed women’s voices. Authorities pushed women into traditional household roles, primarily as mothers and caretakers. Today, men hold an overwhelming 90% majority in positions such as ministers, chairs of state committees and heads of large enterprises, while women hold the majority in supporting roles at 63.6%.
Poverty and the Gender Wage Gap in Azerbaijan
In Azerbaijan, the contrast between urban and rural women’s opportunities remains stark. Baku showcases women in leadership roles and thriving businesses, while rural areas, especially in the south, remain trapped in cycles of poverty, early marriage and economic exclusion. Many rural women lack access to education, pushing them into low- or no-income roles that cement financial dependence and limit future earning potential. This systemic lack of skills and access to better-paying jobs directly feeds into the national gender wage gap in Azerbaijan, as rural women often work in informal, low-paying sectors or perform unpaid household labor. Even with initiatives like UNDP–EU resource centers enabling small business creation, structural inequalities and limited market access keep rural women’s wages far below those of their urban counterparts, perpetuating poverty across generations.
Lag in Pay Parity
According to a 2023 report from the Azerbaijan Statistical Committee, female students make up 52% of higher education enrollment. However, this growth does not translate into equal remuneration. Women primarily work in health care and teaching, yet earn roughly half of what men in these professions receive. Workplace segregation remains a key driver of the wage gap. Social norms expect women to serve as mothers and limit interactions with men, which restricts professional networking opportunities necessary for career advancement. As a result, many women stagnate in low-paying jobs, constrained by societal expectations and fear of condemnation. Thus, many women continue to live under a figurative veil.
Reforms Open Doors, Yet Hurdles Remain
Gender wage disparity contributes to an estimated $160 trillion loss in human capital wealth globally. McKinsey reports that if women participated in the labor market at the same rate as men, global GDP could rise by $28 trillion.
Azerbaijan’s Parliament implemented a law called On amendments to the Labour code of Azerbaijan, which aims to reduce the number of prohibited professions from 674 to 204 for women. In contrast, the professions that continue to be prohibited are for pregnant women and women with children under the age of 1.
The World Bank has been collaborating with Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Labour and Social Protection of Population (MoLSPP) to help women access STEM. The World Bank held a stakeholder roundtable on aiding the increase in the participation of women in the field of STEM. It also developed E-learning courses on occupational health and safety, violence and harassment, along with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, including representatives from MoLSPP. However, deep-rooted patriarchal social norms continue to persist, which hinders progress.
Initiatives to Promote STEM for Women
Women today are significantly underrepresented in fields like STEM, comprising only 30.1% graduates. A handful of institutions have made progress in addressing this including:
Looking Ahead
While policy reforms have begun to address Azerbaijan’s gender wage gap, sustainable change will depend on dismantling entrenched social norms and ensuring equal access to all levels of the labor market.
– Chhahat Kaur Gandhi
Photo: Unsplash
Solar Microgrids in Uganda Powering Progress
Poor and unequal access to electricity prevents rural residents from having core services like refrigeration, the ability to study in the evening or even powered medical tools. This lack perpetuates poverty through low productivity, poor health and limited education.
The introduction of solar microgrids in Uganda provides efficient and more affordable methods of increasing access to electricity. Here is some information on how solar microgrids operate in Uganda.
Background
In rural Uganda, studies estimate that 26 million people live without electricity as the grids are often limited to towns. This is partly because grid expansion is expensive due to long distances and low density. Hence, off-grid solar microgrids have become a cheaper option that is much quicker to install.
Solar microgrids are localized energy systems incorporating features like solar panels, batteries or small distribution lines. In Uganda, they have been used to great success. For example, in The Lamwo District, 25 solar mini-grids provide electricity to more than 15,000 residents and 100 businesses. In Kiwumu, a 40 kW system provides electricity to 360 homes, 60 companies and a maize mill. On Bunjako Island, eight grids serve more than 3,300 people.
Microgrids as a Tool To Reduce Poverty
Investing in Uganda’s solar microgrids has been crucial in bolstering poverty reduction efforts. It has increased the income for rural Ugandans as it provides a boost for buildings like shops, mills, salons and charging kiosks. In Kiwumu, businesses saw an increase of 68% in their revenue. This also helps women’s businesses as they grow with powered sewing machines and food processors.
In the health care sector, solar microgrids have also made an impact. There is now proper refrigeration for vaccines in the regions with these microgrids. Hospitals can now better provide nighttime emergency care. Likewise, diagnostic equipment is now powered more reliably.
Solar microgrids in Uganda have also improved the education effort in rural areas. Evening study is now possible with the lighting produced by electricity. Students and learners in the region can also now use computers and printers more consistently. This has also bolstered efforts to provide digital literacy training.
Conclusion
Some barriers to expanding solar microgrids in the region remain, such as complex regulations and licensing delays. However, more support must be given as expanded microgrid access for rural Uganda reduces energy poverty. It also means the growth of small businesses, better health care and stronger education outcomes: all crucial features in the fight against poverty.
– Seun Adekunle
Photo: Flickr
Maya Pedal: Bikes Transforming Lives in Guatemala
The name refers to the significant Indigenous population in Guatemala, who are primarily of Mayan descent, whilst ‘pedal’ has the same meaning in English. Mayans made up just under half of the national population, but studies suggest they remain one of the poorest and most oppressed groups in the country.
Local Projects
Not only do the bicimaquinas save local people money, time and effort, they also help some of the poorest and most vulnerable people in the area by providing work and a sense of purpose.
Women for Development in Action is a local organization that enables women to grow their own aloe plants before using the bicimaquina as a blender and producing shampoo. As Ana María Guch explains, “First, we cut the aloe, then we take off the skin, cut it into little pieces and put it in the blender. Next, we pedal!” The profits they make from selling their shampoo go towards supporting their families and funding their reforestation project.
Another organisation, Women’s Group for AZUCENA, supports women as they produce their own animal feed by using the bicimaquina as a corn degrainer. Aside from their agricultural projects, the organisation also runs Spanish literacy classes for Indigenous women, giving them a better chance of integrating into society and improving their social mobility, Maya Pedal reports on its website.
Mario Juarez, Director of Maya Pedal, also explains the environmental benefits of creating the bicimaquinas: “I believe with what we do we contribute a little to reduce the damage that as human beings we do to the planet.”
International Impact
Maya Pedal has received international acclaim for its innovative bicimaquinas – as Carlos Enrique Marroquin, Head of Maya Pedal, outlines: “We do not have to do any advertising, because the machine speaks for itself – and as such, the NGO receives volunteer engineers, translators and bike mechanics from all over the world.”
It has also made its machine designs free and available to download anywhere in the world, so that anyone can access them and learn to build and use them themselves, creating a brighter, more environmentally friendly future for everyone, starting with the Maya community in San Andrés Itzapa.
– Elsa Tarring
Photo: Flickr
Planting Prosperity: The Green Wall of China Combats Poverty
On November 28, 2024, the final stretch of the desert met its match. The last 100 meters of shifting sand along the southern edge of the Taklimakan Desert was planted with various seedlings like red willows, saxaul and desert poplar, sealing the gap in what is now a 3,046-kilometer-long green barrier. With that, the Green Wall stands as a living shield against desertification and poverty.
Drivers of Desertification in China
Desertification is “the transformation of fertile land into desert or arid waste” due to a combination of natural and human factors. Shifting climatic and weather patterns can intensify wind speeds and soil erosion, accelerating the spread of desertification. Human-driven climate change has intensified the problem. Specifically, China’s rapidly growing population has placed immense pressure on natural resources, with rising consumption leading to land degradation and creating conditions that allow desertification to swiftly creep up.
The Three North Shelterbelt System
Otherwise known as the Green Wall of China, the Three North Shelterbelt System is one of China’s most significant ecological and economic initiatives. The project carries calculated responsibilities such as improving the ecological environment, mitigating natural disasters and expanding habitable and arable land. These activities have led to its recognition as a key national project.
Beyond environmental goals, it also plays a role in enhancing production conditions, reducing regional disparities and fostering shared prosperity among all ethnic groups. Additionally, the Green Wall of China combats poverty by supporting the restructuring of rural industries, accelerates poverty alleviation among farmers and contributes to long-term sustainable economic and social development.
After generations of sustained effort, the Three North Shelterbelt System has completed afforestation and conservation work across 31.7429 million hectares. As a result, forest coverage in the project area increased from 5.05% in 1977 to 13.84% by 2020.
The initiative created the “Great Green Wall” along China’s northern frontier— serving as a barrier against wind and sand, conserving water and soil, protecting agriculture and supporting animal husbandry and has achieved ecological, economic and social benefits.
Protecting the People and Lands
According to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Forestry and Grassland Bureau, the successful completion of the Green Wall along the Taklimakan Desert will enhance the region’s ecological barrier, stabilize agricultural production, improve urban living conditions and support both economic and social development.
Expanding tree cover helps stabilize water supplies, absorb carbon dioxide and offer communities sustainable access to resources like timber and other forest products. China has adopted scientific sand control technologies, including engineering sand fixation, biological sand control and photovoltaic sand control. While stabilizing and preventing the spread of sand, these efforts have also supported the development of local, sand-based industries– helping to improve lives and boost regional economies.
Looking ahead, Xinjiang plans to further build upon and strengthen the “edge-locking” efforts, contributing to the construction of a robust ecological security barrier in northern China.
How The Green Wall of China Combats Poverty
Along with the hardships of desertification, farmers were uneasy about losing their sole source of income and falling into poverty as the desert expanded. Their fears have been eased through local government subsidies and additional employment opportunities.
The Chinese government launched the “Returning Farmland to Forest Program,” also known as “Grain for Green.” This initiative provided financial incentives to farmers to cease cultivation on vulnerable land and instead plant trees. The program has a dual purpose: first, to reduce soil erosion and prevent further flooding; and second, to ensure that farmers’ quality of life continues to improve, even with the loss of arable farmland. In return for the protection of the newly planted trees, farmers received subsidies, as well as land rights to the fields and terraces that they managed.
The amount of compensation varies based on location and the type of land cultivated; however, according to the State Forestry Administration, the average household receives no less than 9,000 yuan, or $1,253. Households engaged in the program receive payments directly to their bank accounts after forestry officers conduct annual inspections of their forest plots.
Employment Diversification
In addition to providing subsidies, the Returning Farmland to Forest Program has helped diversify employment opportunities and broaden the industrial base in impoverished areas. A study conducted by four Chinese universities examining the program’s long-term impact on rural economic development found that there was a 10.9% increase in the value generated by local primary sectors, compared to similar counties that did not participate. Furthermore, rural employment in agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry and fishing rose by 8.2%.
The Three-North Shelterbelt System holds the title of the Green Wall of China and with it, the aid for poverty. The project has enhanced the region’s ecological environment, boosted grain production and achieved progress in developing forest product bases. Through the growth of forest and fruit-related industries, the project has helped lift tens of millions of local residents out of poverty.
The project has generated a wide range of job opportunities in areas such as tree planting and land maintenance, offering stable sources of income for local communities. This rise in employment has elevated living standards and stimulated economic growth in rural and impoverished regions.
The restoration of arable land has revitalized agriculture, allowing farmers to improve crop yields and diversify their production. The benefits of the Green Wall are evident in the rise of agricultural productivity, which has bolstered food security and aid for poverty. In 2023 alone, forest-related industries in China generated an annual output of 8.04 trillion yuan, exceeded $180 billion in forest product trade and directly employed 60 million people across the country.
Other Poverty Alleviation Initiatives
The Green Wall of China was among the first large-scale projects to link environmental restoration with poverty reduction, but it is not the only one. The following are other poverty alleviation initiatives:
Looking Ahead
The Green Wall of China shows how large-scale environmental projects can restore fragile ecosystems while improving livelihoods. By combining ecological restoration with poverty alleviation, China’s afforestation programs have created jobs, strengthened food security and offered long-term stability to millions. As these efforts expand, the Green Wall stands as a model of how investment in nature can build resilience against both environmental and economic challenges.
– Gabriella Luneau
Photo: Flickr
Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Books Redefining Poverty
Alongside influencing readers and raising awareness, these books have also prompted policy executives to cite these works in designing aid strategies; NGOs have adopted their approaches; and readers have been moved to volunteer, donate and advocate.
Three landmark works in the world of literature, among the millions of others that this article is going to discuss, have played an enormous role in transforming how the world thinks about poverty, catalyzing public awareness and lacing it with public policy influence.
The End of Poverty
When economist Jeffrey D. Sachs published “The End of Poverty,” it was written with the primary purpose and goal of being a rally cry as well as a detailed blueprint for eradicating extreme poverty by 2025. Drawing on his experience advising governments and the United Nations (U.N.), Sachs argued that targeted investments in health, education and infrastructure could break the “poverty trap” for the world’s most impoverished nations.
The book popularized the Millennium Development Goals to audiences beyond policy circles, bringing them into mainstream discourse. By weaving the threads of real-life case studies from sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and Latin America with the needle of economic theory, Sachs portrayed the fight against poverty.
This fight has plagued our world since time immemorial, with a raging urgency. He also portrayed it as a fight that is plausible and winnable. Its influence extended to advocacy campaigns like the ONE Campaign. It encouraged donor nations to re-examine their foreign aid commitments.
Poor Economics
Whereas on one hand, Sachs envisioned large-scale macroeconomic interventions, on the other, “Poor Economics” brought the conversation down to the micro level, to the average person’s household. Drawing on more than 15 years of field experiments in developing countries, Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, a duo who would go on to win the Nobel Prize in 2019, challenged conventional wisdom about people with low incomes.
They poignantly display that people living in poverty make rational choices within the constraints they face and that well-intentioned policies can fail if they ignore behavioral realities and societal factors. Their research pushed governments and NGOs to incorporate approaches rooted in evidence, such as small-scale randomized controlled trials, into program design. In doing so, the book shifted development economics toward a more empirical, human-centered methodology, one that prizes adaptation over a ubiquitous solution.
Behind the Beautiful Forevers
While Sachs and Banerjee and Duflo wrote from the perspective of economists, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Katherine Boo brought the indescribable power of narrative nonfiction to the issue. “Behind the Beautiful Forevers” follows the lives of residents in Annawadi, a makeshift settlement near Mumbai’s airport. Over three years, Boo documented the daily struggles and moral dilemmas of families navigating corruption, caste prejudice and economic precarity.
The book stripped away the ubiquitous and abstract notions of “the poor.” It replaced them with deeply personal stories of people, stories of ambition, betrayal, resilience, injustice and most of all, humanity. The success of “Behind the Beautiful Forevers”, including a National Book Award, brought slum realities into the consciousness of readers who might never, without it, have considered the human cost of urban inequality. The work spurred into motion discussions in classrooms, book clubs and policy panels about the lived experience of poverty and the invisible barriers to upward mobility.
Conclusion
Individually, “Behind the Beautiful Forevers”, “Poor Economics” and “The End of Poverty” speak in different realms of writing: macro solutions, micro interventions and human narratives. Together, they form a powerful triad that has altered the global poverty discourse.
The books remind us that awareness is the first step toward change and that stories, whether told in any manner, can transform not just how we think, but how we act in the grand scheme of the world.
– Ruhani Rahul
Photo: Pxhere
Novissi: AI Fighting Global Poverty
Newborns in Malawi
Malawi has long struggled with one of the world’s highest neonatal mortality rates. Between 2000 and 2015, the rate hovered around 27 deaths per 1,000 live births, far above the global average of 17. Conventional monitoring often missed early signs of distress, especially in overcrowded maternity wards with limited staff.
At Lilongwe’s Area 25 Health Centre, an AI-powered fetal monitoring system now tracks heart rate and oxygen levels continuously. It acts like a second pair of eyes, sounding the alarm before midwives can detect trouble. A six-month before-and-after study found that intrapartum stillbirths and early neonatal deaths dropped sharply once the system was introduced. At this single clinic, stillbirths and neonatal deaths have fallen by more than 82%.
For midwives, AI has become the colleague that never leaves the room; for mothers, it is the difference between heartbreak and hope. In Malawi, AI has stepped into the role of caregiver as a new angel for humanity, watching over the smallest lives.
Novissi Predicting Poverty
Before COVID-19, many poor households in Togo were invisible to social registries. Informal workers lacked paperwork or census records, so cash transfers often took months to arrange and often missed those most in need.
During the pandemic, the government built Novissi, a digital program that used satellite imagery and mobile-phone metadata to predict poverty at the household level. Families then received mobile-money transfers within days. Registration was simple, verification used voter IDs, and payments scaled quickly to hundreds of thousands of people. Independent evaluations found the AI-assisted targeting was both faster and more accurate than older methods.
Offering Dignity in India
Rural India is home to millions who live on less than $2 a day, with unemployment and underemployment leaving families stuck in poverty. Even when work is available, it is often seasonal farm labor or insecure low-wage jobs.
The social enterprise Karya, backed by Microsoft and the Gates Foundation, is tackling this challenge by using AI to create dignified digital work. Villagers are paid to record speech and text in their own languages, building datasets that train global AI tools. Unlike most digital piecework, Karya guarantees above-minimum wages and shares royalties whenever the data is reused.
For workers, it means food on the table, children staying in school, and recognition that their voices matter.
Carrying Water and Shining the Light in Africa
Across sub-Saharan Africa, more than 400 million people lack clean water and 600 million live without electricity. Even when solar pumps or mini-grids are installed, they often fail within months, leaving families hauling water long distances or studying by candlelight until repairs are made.
Organizations like Innovation: Africa, now fit solar-powered systems with remote monitoring sensors. These track water flow and electricity output, transmitting data over mobile networks. When a system falters, technicians receive alerts and can repair the problem within 48 hours instead of months. In one Ugandan village, a broken pump that once left families without water for weeks was repaired in two days after the system flagged the failure.
For families, it means reliable water and steady light to study at night, turning fragile systems into dependable lifelines.
– Diane Dunlop
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Positive Steps in Reducing Cancer in the UAE
The UAE has an estimated poverty rate of 19.5%, driven in part by rising living costs and low wages that fail to ensure sustainable conditions for workers. The leading causes of death in the UAE are COVID-19, ischemic heart disease, stroke and breast cancer (in the case of women).
Cancer in the UAE
Diseases and cancers are prominent in the UAE in part because health care is not free for expatriates and foreign residents, who make up 10.04% of the country’s 11.35 million people. This creates barriers to early detection, as many residents cannot afford regular checkups. When cancers are detected, they are often at advanced stages, making treatment more difficult.
Environmental factors also play a role. The UAE’s reliance on oil production and shipments increases the risk of air pollution, with higher levels of carbon in the atmosphere. Prolonged exposure to polluted air can cause labored breathing, skin irritation and, over time, elevate cancer risks.
The leading cancers in the UAE are breast, thyroid, colorectal, skin and leukemia. While cancers such as breast cancer and leukemia are not directly tied to environmental causes, conditions like skin and thyroid cancer may be linked to pollution and environmental exposure.
Expanding Access to Affordable Cancer Care
In response, hospitals in Abu Dhabi have expanded access to cancer care. Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, located in the nation’s capital, houses 15 specialized institutes, including one focused on cancer treatment. The clinic is diverse, staffed with doctors from Western countries and operates in Arabic and English.
As a semi-government hospital, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi offers care at significantly lower costs than private facilities. Government-owned hospitals typically charge between AED 250–400 ($60–$109), while privately owned hospitals cost around AED 600–800 ($163–$218).
Private treatment expenses are often unaffordable for individuals earning less than AED 80 ($22) a day. In contrast, government hospitals provide a more accessible option, particularly for costly treatments like cancer care.
What Does This Mean for People in Poverty?
Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi provides financial assistance for patients unable to afford treatment. Individuals whose annual family income is at or below 250% of the Federal Poverty Guideline (FPG) may qualify for free or discounted care. The clinic also collaborates with insurance providers, accepts multiple payment methods and allows for government assistance in covering medical expenses.
Through combined government and hospital support, people living in poverty can access necessary medical care without the overwhelming burden of bills. Early detection of cancers such as breast and skin cancer can ensure that low-income patients receive timely treatment, allowing them to live healthier, more fulfilling lives.
Final Remarks
Government-affiliated clinics like the Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi provide greater access to cancer screenings for impoverished people. Early detection not only reduces cancer-related mortality but also gives individuals in low-income communities the chance to pursue healthier, more productive lives, including improved career opportunities.
– Erin Lee
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Solutions to Rapid Urbanization in Wetlands
Lagos, Nigeria and Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) experience some of these issues. However, they’ve developed sustainable solutions that help control and maintain livelihoods and infrastructures.
Lagos
Lagos, Nigeria, is a wetland area heavily affected by rapid urbanization. Housing and informal settlements, transportation infrastructures, solid waste management, environmental pollution and unemployment are all problems throughout the city.
Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Housing and Urban Development has previously stated that it is committed to constructing more than 10,000 housing units nationwide, including Lagos, with the Renewed Hope Cities and Estates Program. This opportunity also created 252,800 jobs for Nigerians, contributing to the country’s economic landscape. The workers also received wages significantly above the national minimum wage.
Waste-to-energy plants offer sustainable solutions to water disposal and energy generation, many of which can be seen in Lagos. Harvest Waste Consortium has formalized a partnership with Lagos to construct a waste-to-energy plant using advanced technology to create clean energy from the state’s solid, commercial and industrial waste. Around 40,000 homes will be taken off the national electricity grid due to clean energy.
Kinshasa
Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, is another wetland area that is impacted by rapid urbanization. Increased risk of flooding continues throughout the city due to population growth and improper drainage systems. Informal settlements also affect the quality of life in Kinshasa, making strategic urban planning essential to manage the city’s growth and transformation.
A Participatory Slum Upgrading Program works in Kinshasa to improve slum conditions while preventing the possibility of creating new slums. The program aims to ensure access to safe, adequate, affordable housing and basic services to upgrade the slums.
As rapid urbanization in wetlands continues, Kinshasa has developed nature-based solutions. These solutions help to build urban climate resilience, lower carbon emissions and provide socioeconomic benefits. Proper drainage systems that can handle channel runoff from heavy rains were developed and restoring soil fertility, creating jobs and providing food for locals are also possible because of these solutions.
Conclusion
Rapid urbanization in wetlands presents serious challenges for cities like Lagos and Kinshasa. Yet, both cities demonstrate that these impacts can be managed with strategic planning and sustainable solutions, such as housing initiatives, waste-to-energy projects and nature-based approaches.
Addressing rapid wetland urbanization requires long-term investment, innovative policies and community participation to balance urban growth with environmental protection and improved quality of life.
– Eva Wakelin
Photo: Unsplash