21 Jul 2008
Western understanding of the universal principles of children’s health and development has much to offer the emerging economies of the Global South, but it’s a two-way stretch: how countries like China, India or Tanzania deal with the problems they inherit from the developed world has much to teach Western prevention science.
22 Jul 2008
“Forget those ‘best practice’ blueprints and planning models and frameworks - we should allow people near to the problems the time, space and resources to innovate, learn and manage change effectively…”
20 Aug 2010
Socio-linguistics has found a way to bring systematic understanding to research findings that are consistent across most but not all cultures and those that differ markedly between cultures. Might a similar approach be useful to prevention science as it begins to reckon with the many similarities and few variations in the factors influencing children’s mental health in different parts of the world?
24 Jul 2008
Trials in Tanzania, where young people are being encouraged to become agents of social change in their neighborhoods, are improving the evidence in favor of collective efficacy as a public health strategy – as well as giving adolescents everywhere a better name.
25 Jul 2008
Small comfort, but the severity of the need and the scarcity of resources to support children in the Global South create a valuable opportunity for straightforward experiment. Services taken for granted in the North that have become entangled in the structures and politics of everyday life can be tested at a more radical level in the South.