Sub-Saharan Africa, for example, is not generally the subject of short-term speculation. |
|
Honey-guides are confined to Sub-Saharan Africa with a few species in Asia and they are also known as indicator birds or honeybirds. |
|
No region on the face of earth is more affected by the unfair competition in world cotton markets than sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In that time around 12 million sub-Saharan Africans have succumbed to the disease. |
|
This region lies in the heart of sub-Saharan Africa and is ranked by the UN as the third poorest country in the world. |
|
In South Africa, and much of sub-Saharan Africa, mortality is currently spiralling upwards. |
|
Blackcaps spending the summer in northern and eastern Europe are wholly migratory and winter south to sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Whatever the exact numbers, this was a degree of land alienation unrivalled in any sub-Saharan African context. |
|
Only a handful of sub-Saharan African nations suffer more wretched conditions. |
|
The lowest levels of economic growth were in sub-Saharan African countries. |
|
The Caribbean is the second-most affected region after sub-Saharan Africa in the world. |
|
Women are the primary caregivers in most sub-Saharan African households and Wereilu is no exception. |
|
Built out of coral, the winding streets and courtyarded houses feel more North African than sub-Saharan. |
|
Why didn't sub-Saharan Africans go out and domesticate zebras and rhinoceroses. |
|
Much of this aid goes to sub-Saharan Africa, South America, and Southern Asia. |
|
I mean, how bad is it compared with other regions in sub-Saharan Africa that are also in need? |
|
It's the introduction of an electronic medical record in one of the poorest regions of sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Despite its rich mineral resources, Angola is one of the poorest countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
An appropriately developed score might be useful in audit, research, and clinical practice in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Entrants should have been born in a sub-Saharan African country and must currently be resident in that country. |
|
|
Three out of four people who die with the disease live in sub-Saharan South Africa. |
|
When Strike Command was disestablished in 1971, responsibility for Sub-Saharan Africa was left unassigned. |
|
That is the case with regard to many states in the Third World, especially sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
It is a primate, close kin to the bushbabies of sub-Saharan Africa and the lemurs of Madagascar. |
|
South Africa contributes about 30 percent of lions hunted in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
There are 291 million people living below the poverty line in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In the 75 years before World War II arsenicals were used to treat syphilis in sub-Saharan Africa and syringe use was tightly controlled. |
|
This fate is unfortunately not rare for girls, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In sub-Saharan Africa, 400,000 to 500,000 people are at risk of contracting malaria. |
|
The children of asylum seekers from sub-Saharan Africa will go to their kindergartens and all the other kids will go to their own. |
|
According to the report, the segregated schools are for the children of black sub-Saharan asylum seekers only. |
|
Four thousand years ago Kerma, the capital of the kingdom of Kush, was a massive metropolis, the first in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Black Sigatoka, also known as black leaf streak, is common on bananas in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In sub-Saharan Africa rain comes in monsoons, which are large storms that dump a large amount of rain. |
|
The earliest sub-Saharan African work in the collection is a striking Nok terracotta female head and torso, nearly two feet tall. |
|
The squacco heron is a summer migrant from sub-Saharan Africa to the marshes of southern Europe. |
|
Cassava is one of the most important staple crops for farmers in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
This week, he becomes only the third sitting U.S. president to make a state visit to sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Entrepreneurs and investors gathered with donor agencies in Ghana to discuss off-grid lighting for sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In Southern Morocco, one of the best known subcultural groups is the Gnawa, descendants of slaves from sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
|
In North Africa and sub-Saharan Africa, French is more of a lingua franca than English, and in East Africa it's Swahili. |
|
The disease is devastating populations in sub-Saharan Africa, leaving 12 percent of the children in the region parentless. |
|
Thus, Pygmies exhibit the highest level of diversity in this small sample of sub-Saharan Africans. |
|
The two decades before 1995 had been a period of almost continuous economic decline in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In many respects Tanzania defies the claim that girls are disadvantaged in terms of education in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Festive sprays of leaf and berry heighten the bright and breezy feel of this sub-Saharan Dinky-Dell, and enhance its Greeting Card air of chirrupy good cheer. |
|
Cassava is grown for its starchy tubers, which are most often used to prepare farina or flour, and it is the primary source of carbohydrates in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Flint said the impact might be twofold, lower demand from the US brought about by the weaker dollar may result in a slow down in imports from sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
Clearly, injectable contraceptives are a critical tool for health providers in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
During the same period, there has been a significant shift towards spending in sub-Saharan Africa and away from eastern Europe, central Asia and British overseas territories. |
|
Rwanda has been an exemplar of the economic possibilities of Sub-Saharan Africa and BRD has been a key part of that growth. |
|
The bottom of the list, meanwhile, was dominated by strife-ridden nations in Sub-Saharan Africa, though Haiti came in dead last. |
|
This is not to suggest in any way that we should return to diffusionist models of towns and states in Saharan and sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In rural sub-Saharan Africa, for example, an influx of 100,000 refugees will desertify 360 hectares. |
|
Squacco Herons, Ardeola ralloides, occur in Europe, North West Africa, sub-Saharan Africa and southwest Asia. |
|
The mamba, a venomous snake from sub-Saharan Africa, inspired Raffoul's collection. |
|
If this is confirmed, urogenital schistosomiasis may represent the most common infection in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
He limits his discussion to sub-Saharan films, concentrating on Francophone and Anglophone Africa with some attention to the Lusophone countries. |
|
By 1,700BC, the first metropolis in sub-Saharan Africa had developed at Kerma. |
|
Human African Trypanosomiasis is a major threat to approximately 60 million people living in 36 countries in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
|
EfficientIP declared that it has inked a Sub-Saharan Africa distribution agreement with Bitrate, expanding its networking and IT security business in this market. |
|
In a little under a decade, Wari has established itself as a leading digital finance service company and has established a presence in over half of sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
The second treatise comes from the pen of Paul Collier, a lifetime expert on the nondevelopment of fifty-eight small countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
The Red River hog, from sub-Saharan Africa, can make an emphatic claim. |
|
Aflatoxins are immunotoxins that frequently contaminate staple foods in The Gambia and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, resulting in high exposure throughout life. |
|
The trypanosome, a parasitic single-cell eukaryote, is responsible for sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in livestock through much of sub-saharan Africa. |
|
Epitrochlear lymph nodes as marker of HIV disease in sub-Saharan Africa. |
|