Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011 Huffington Post Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter has been an unrelenting crusader for people suffering from mental illness (which I refer to here as brain disorders). For more than 40 years she's been working on promoting awareness of the issues, public policy, making health care insurance coverage for these brain disorders comparable to traditional health care coverage, and reducing stigma and discrimination against the people who suffer from these brain conditions.
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Friday, Dec. 16, 2011 Associated Press Congo's supreme court on Friday upheld President Joseph Kabila's victory following a contested election, raising fears of more violence in sub-Saharan Africa's largest nation because the main opposition candidate already has rejected the results showing he placed second.
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Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011 Fixing Ailing System Achievable Atlanta Journal Constitution I became involved in mental health issues in 1966, campaigning for my husband for governor. A newspaper exposé had revealed terrible conditions in our large mental hospital, Central State in Milledgeville, and families of the patients there were frustrated and almost beyond hope that anything could be done to help their loved ones.
Read the article > (link no longer available)
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Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011 China Daily Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter shares his good memories about China and views on Sino-U.S. relations during an exclusive interview with China Daily at a hotel in Beijing on Dec. 14, 2011. Carter has been in China for the past week to mark the 40th anniversary of Ping-Pong Diplomacy.
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Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011 Associated Press The results from Congo's election which handed victory to the country's president of 10 years lack credibility, said one of the major observation missions.
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Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011 CNN.com David Pottie, of the Carter Center, discusses the disputed results of elections in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011 Voice of America Electoral observers from the U.S.-based Carter Center say presidential results in the Democratic Republic of Congo were "mismanaged," compromising the integrity of a vote that gave President Joseph Kabila another five years in power. The leading opposition candidate is rejecting the poll.
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Thursday, Nov. 1, 2011 BBC The Carter Center said it helped launch congomines.org to give people more information about the mining sector, including contracts and payments.
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Monday, Oct. 24, 2011 PBS NewsHour Tunisia, the country that ushered in the Arab Spring, was the first in the region to hold unfettered elections on Sunday. Voters, spurred on by thoughts of a "new beginning," waited in line for hours in some spots to participate in the historic day, election observers said.
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Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 Intelligence² In this special Intelligence² interview—with Jon Snow from Channel 4 News—at the Royal Festival Hall, President Carter talks about his career as president and the past three decades as a senior statesman and ambassador for The Carter Center.
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Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 PBS NewsHour After a brutal civil war, an estimated 40 percent of Liberians suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, but mental health is just now becoming a priority in the West African nation.
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Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 PBS NewsHour After decades of civil war, Liberia struggles to provide mental health care for its citizens. In partnership with the Bureau for International Reporting, special correspondent Kira Kay reports.
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Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 BBC The U.K. government is backing a new campaign to try to rid the world of Guinea worm by 2015.
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Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 The Guardian The world is tantalisingly close to eradicating Guinea worm disease, which would make it only the second disease of humans to be wiped from the planet, according to former U.S. President Jimmy Carter.
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Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011 Reuters Britain said it was ready to give 20 million pounds over four years to support a global campaign to combat Guinea worm, but wants other donors to come forward with additional funding.
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Sunday, Sept. 18, 2011 NPR Former President Jimmy Carter urges the United States to not veto the Security Council vote for Palestinian statehood anticipated to take place next week.
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Friday, Sept. 16, 2011 CNN CNN's Jim Clancy talks with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter about the Palestinian statehood bid.
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Thursday, Sept. 15, 2011 President Carter Interview The Rachel Maddow Show (MSNBC) Rachel Maddow interviews former U.S. President Jimmy Carter on the direction of Middle East peace, President Obama, religion, President Reagan, and more.
Watch the video >
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Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011 The Real Work of Election Monitors foreignaffairs.com. Professors Susan Hyde and Judith G. Kelley ("") are correct in saying election monitoring has become "almost universally accepted in media and policy circles," but are wrong to imply that monitors are unaware "of the power and limits of observation." Rather, it is Hyde and Kelley who may be guilty of exaggerating them both.
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Sunday, Sept. 11, 2011 The Guardian He may live a modest life in a one-horse town, but Jimmy Carter, now 86, retains his global vision. And 30 years after leaving the White House, the peanut farmer turned president is still a man on mission. In Plains, Georgia, we found the 39th US president full of energy… and determined to make a difference.
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Friday, Sept. 9, 2011 AllAfrica The Carter Center-Liberia in collaboration with the Ministry of Health and Social Warfare (MOHSW) has graduated the first batch 21 Metal Health workers in the country.
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Wednesday, Aug.17, 2011 NPR In this African country, locals are still trying to heal from years of civil war, while the only psychiatric hospital has 36 beds and one practicing doctor. And yet, Liberia's first ever class of mental health clinicians graduated last week with help from the U.S.-based Carter Center. A Liberia mental health expert speaks with guest host Tony Cox.
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Wednesday, Aug. 03, 2011 Voice of America Ghana has joined 14 other African countries in eradicating Guinea worm disease. The announcement from the Carter Center in Atlanta says the disease cycle has been broken after a 23-year nationwide battle.
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Thursday, July 28, 2011 Associated Press release, carried by more than 60 media outlets. Jimmy Carter watched in horror as the inches-(centimeters-) long worm emerged from the breast of a woman in remote northern Ghana. That was in the 1980s. The former U.S. president dedicated himself to eradicating the sickness and estimated it would take 10 years.
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Monday, July 18, 2011 The New York Times As of July 15, one more country was declared free of the guinea worm: Sudan. But it was a hollow victory. That was the date Sudan split in two and South Sudan became the world's newest country — and all the known Sudanese cases are in the south.
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Saturday, June 25, 2011 New York Times Sometimes the story becomes more than a story.
Read the article >
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Friday, June 10, 2011 Farewell to Guinea Worm National Geographic It's not every day that a disease disappears, but Guinea worm disease may be next, after smallpox. Thanks to international efforts led by The Carter Center, just 1,797 cases were reported worldwide last year, most in what is now South Sudan.
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Wednesday, May 4, 2011 CNN New studies suggest antibiotics used to treat an eye disease can save children's lives in Ethiopia. The video highlights Ethiopia's and the Center's trachoma effort and experts in Ethiopia.
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Wednesday, April 20, 2011 InternalMedicineNews.com Most of the way through a doctorate in medical anthropology, Dr. Brandon Kohrt felt a void: "I was doing research on cross-cultural mental health, and I realized that just doing research – especially in areas where there are no services – wasn't enough."
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Wednesday, April 27, 2011 Journal of the American Medical Association A 25-year-old campaign to rid the world of Guinea worm disease has written 2 more success stories. The Atlanta-based Carter Center announced recently that eradication efforts have halted transmission of the parasitic disease, also known as dracunculiasis, in Nigeria and Niger.
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Monday, April 18, 2011 Voice of America As Southern Sudan prepares to emerge on the world stage as the newest nation on the planet, health workers combating Guinea Worm disease are hoping the country's independence will energize the campaign against the parasite.
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Thursday, April 7, 2011 Associated Press Former President Jimmy Carter says much of the discrimination and abuse suffered by women around the world is attributable to a belief "that women are inferior in the eyes of God."
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Thursday, April 7, 2011 CNN Jimmy Carter discusses the unrest in Ivory Coast and the impact of the Arab Spring on women's rights.
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Tuesday, April 5, 2011 Voice of America Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter says women have played a pivotal role in the uprisings in the Middle East, including Tunisia and Egypt, as well as the ongoing revolution in Libya that demanded change for democracy and equal rights.
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Wednesday, March 30, 2011 Reuters The United States should end its trade embargo on Cuba to mend ties, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter said on Wednesday, but he also urged Havana to do more, such as freeing jailed U.S. aid contractor Alan Gross.
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Monday, Feb. 28, 2011 The Christian Science Monitor Photojournalist Pewee Flomoku captured images of child soldiers and the other horrors of war in Liberia. Now he's working on free and fair elections.
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Saturday, Feb. 23, 2011 PBS Newshour Officials at the Atlanta-based Carter Center said this week that the effort to eradicate the Guinea Worm parasite -- a scourge that dates back to Biblical times -- is now 99 percent complete.
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Friday, Feb. 18, 2011 Reuters Africa Nigeria has halted transmission of Guinea worm disease, bringing closer the moment when a disease is eradicated from the planet for just the second time in history, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter said on Thursday.
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Monday, Feb. 7, 2011 The Objective Here Is Zero Cases Worldwide Atlanta Journal Constitution Guinea worm disease, a parasitic illness contracted by the poorest Africans who drink contaminated water, has been called the "forgotten disease of forgotten people."
Read the article > (link no longer available)
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Jan. – Mar. 2011 Turning the Corner (PDF) BBC Focus on Africa Magazine Once a scourge of many parts of Africa, guinea worm is on the verge of eradication. Joseph Warungu speaks to former United States President jimmy Carter about his foundation's fight to beat the disease.
Read the article (PDF) >
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Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011 Newscientist.com "There is huge excitement and euphoria here," says Makoy Samuel Yibi, phoning from Juba in Southern Sudan. There, this week's looks set to divide Sudan into independent north and south countries, potentially ending decades of civil war. The result is largely a foregone conclusion: independence will be announced officially in February.
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Thursday, Jan. 13, 2011 The New York Times New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof posts answers to readers' questions for former U.S. President Jimmy Carter.
Read more >
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Monday, Jan. 10, 2011 CNN On Sunday, the people of Southern Sudan began casting ballots in a historic seven-day referendum in which they will choose between continued unity with northern Sudan, or secession to become a new state.
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