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For A Change Magazine: Volume 16 Number 03

Fair Trade Makes Good

'Fair trade' is featured in this issues Lead article. Other highlights include a story about a small German community who suffered dreadfully in WWII. The secrets of success are revealed in a report on the Indian industrial empire 'Tata' and guest writer Bishop Michael Marshall writes about the material and the spiritual needing each other.

THERE ARE 18 ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE
When 19-year-old Romanian Eva Szabo discovered she had cancer, she didn't understand why her family were so upset.
When a group of Ugandan children was asked to put on a play, they chose war and reconciliation as its themes.
One hundred and six media professionals call on the Angolan government to end the repression of dissenting journalistic voices.
'Together we can make a world of difference'
The people of Pforzheim, Germany, suffered dreadfully in World War II-and a British aircrew paid a terrible price.
As you reach out for a jar of coffee in the supermarket, you can give a hand to the people who grew the beans...
I went home with some big questions in my mind...
It's not often you see elderly church-going ladies baking chocolate cakes for prostitutes working the streets at night.
'La Marelle' is French for hopscotch, one of the oldest children's games still in use, going back to ancient Greece and beyond.
If love makes the world go round, greed also keeps things moving-but it makes for a stomach-churning ride.
The atmosphere at the Portofranco centre in Milan is ideal for young people who don't feel comfortable at school.
The Indian industrial empire that is producing social capital as well as profits.
When she was 14, Karin Peters' uncle died of cancer. 'It felt like a bomb had been dropped on top of my world,' she says.
Money, sex and power - the three obsessions of our age - are the tyrants in an affluent society.
Even the most pragmatic students become philosophers after reading Sophie's World.
Has all this reporting given us the real story? At the time, the 1991 Gulf War was the 'most televised conflict ever'.
The number of Welsh speakers had actually increased by two per cent since the last census in 1991.
Having lost a son in World War I, the great German artist Kathe Kollwitz was avowedly anti-war but equally committed to what she
Issue language

English

Periodical
Issue language

English

Periodical