Papers and reports
Policy papers, campaign reports, and research.
Full list of policy papers
Health insurance in low-income countries: Where is the evidence that it works?
Some donors and governments propose that health insurance mechanisms can close health financing gaps and benefit poor people. Although beneficial for the people able to join, this method of financing health care has so far been unable to sufficiently fill financing gaps in health systems and improve access to quality health care for the poor. Donors and governments need to consider the evidence and scale up public resources for the health sector. Without adequate public funding and government stewardship, health insurance mechanisms pose a threat rather than an opportunity to the objectives of equity and universal access to health care.
Fast Forward: How the European Commission can take the lead in providing high-quality budget support for education and health
Developing-country governments desperately need more long-term and predictable aid, given through their budgets, to finance the expansion of health care, education, and other vital social services. The European Commission (EC) is one of the biggest donors providing this kind of essential budget support, and has innovative plans to further improve and increase this aid.
Rethinking disasters: why death and destruction is not nature's fault but human failure
A destructive combination of earthquakes, floods, droughts and other hazards make South Asia is the world’s most disaster-prone region. The effects are aggravated by climate change, unsuitable social and development policies, and environmental degradation. The effect is to slow or block development and keep millions trapped in poverty.The Gaza Strip: a humanitarian implosion
The situation for 1.5 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip is worse now than it has ever been since the start of the Israeli military occupation in 1967. The current situation in Gaza is man-made, completely avoidable and, with the necessary political will, can also be reversed.
Community peacebuilding in Afghanistan: The case for a national strategy
Existing measures to promote peace in Afghanistan are not succeeding. This is not only due to the revival of the Taliban, but also because little has been done to try to ensure that families, communities, and tribes – the fundamental units of Afghan society – get on better with each other. War has fractured the social fabric of the country and, in the context of severe and persistent poverty, local disputes have the potential to turn violent and to exacerbate the wider conflict. But there is no effective strategy to help Afghans deal with disputes in a peaceful and constructive way.
After the cyclone: lessons from a disaster
Three months after Cyclone Sidr struck the coastal areas of Bangladesh, Oxfam reports on the fate of those who lost their loved ones, their homes and their jobs on 15 November 2007. With more than 1.3 million Bangladeshis still living in temporary shelter and hundreds of thousands unable to recover their incomes, Oxfam calls on the government and the international community to scale up their recovery and rehabilitation efforts to meet the cyclone survivors’ urgent need for housing and livelihoods.
Afghanistan: development and humanitarian priorities
While aid has contributed to progress in Afghanistan, especially in social and economic infrastructure – and whilst more aid is needed – the development process has to date been too centralised, top-heavy and insufficient. Urgent action is required to promote comprehensive rural development, reforming subnational governance, and channelling more resources directly to communities.
Oxfam Analysis of the Bali Conference Outcomes (18 December 2007)
Financing adaptation: Why the UN's Bali climate conference must mandate the search for new funds
Adapting to climate change in developing countries is likely to cost at least $50bn each year. Yet international funding efforts to date have been woeful. It is now time for the dissonance between the science and the policy rhetoric to end.
Investing for life: Meeting poor people’s needs for access to medicines through responsible business practice
There are major shortcomings in the pharmaceutical industry’s current initiatives to ensure that poor people have access to medicines. The industry must put access to medicines at the heart of its decision-making and practices to allow it to better play its role in achieving the universal right to health.
Climate Alarm: Disasters increase as climate change bites
Climatic disasters are increasing as temperatures climb and rainfall intensifies. A rise in small- and medium-scale disasters is a particularly worrying trend. Yet even extreme weather need not bring disasters; it is poverty and powerlessness that make people vulnerable.
Oxfam submission to UK government inquiry on Afghanistan - November 2007
This paper - originally submitted to the UK Parliament's committee on international development - outlines the urgent action necessary to avert a humanitarian disaster in Afghanistan. It focuses on essential policy change in development and humanitarian spheres, including issues of aid effectiveness, governance, agriculture and counter-narcotics.
Up in smoke? Asia and the Pacific
The latest global scientific consensus from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) indicates that all of Asia is very likely to warm during this century, accompanied by less predictable and more extreme patterns of rainfall.
Bio-fuelling poverty: why the EU renewable fuel target may be disastrous for poor people
In January of this year, the European Commission published its Renewable Energy Roadmap, proposing a mandatory target that biofuels must provide ten per cent of member states’ transport fuels by 2020.
What agenda now for agriculture?: A response to the World Development Report 2008
After two decades of indefensible neglect, agriculture is back on the agenda. The World Bank’s publication of the ‘World Development Report 2008: Agriculture For Development’ reflects this renewed interest in the sector’s potential to reduce rural poverty and inequality.
Africa’s missing billions: International arms flows and the cost of conflict
Africa suffers enormously from conflict and armed violence. As well as the human tragedy, armed conflict costs Africa around $18bn per year, seriously derailing development.
The building blocks of sustainable peace: The views of internally displaced people in Northern Uganda
While international attention focuses on the negotiations in Juba between the Ugandan Government and the Lord’s Resistance Army, the views of those most affected by the conflict have so far not been adequately heard.
Sink or swim: Why Disaster Risk Reduction is central to surviving floods in South Asia
The United Nations has described the 2007 flood in India as ‘the worst in living memory.’ The time is ripe for governments and donors in South Asia need to invest in reducing the risk of disasters as a long-term cure to chronic floods.
Rising to the humanitarian challenge
in Iraq
Armed violence is the greatest threat facing Iraqis, but the population is also experiencing another kind of crisis of an alarming scale and severity.
Adapting to climate change: What's needed in poor countries, and who should pay
There is a deep injustice in the impacts of climate change. Rich countries have caused the problem with many decades of greenhouse-gas emissions, but poor countries will be worst affected, facing greater droughts, floods, hunger, and disease.

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