alongside those expected over who "owns" and has access to any vaccine. How this bitter and potentially discriminatory scenario might unfold was vividly depicted last week by David Pilling, the Financial Times correspondent who for many years has covered the global pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry.Faced with such an unpalatable possibility, its perhaps worth remembering, as specialist correspondent David Pilling of the Financial Times has pointed out, that the development of most vaccines have been the result of international collaborations.
Date: May 17, 2020
Category: More news
Source: Google
Japan Commemorates Two Disasters: Tohoku/Fukushima And The Firebombing ...
A description of that natural disaster, its immediate aftermath, and lingering effects, provides the introduction, and several of the themes, of an excellent new book on Japan by Financial Times correspondent David Pilling, Bending AdversityJapan and the Art of Survival.
ratings in the teens, and continued attacks on her father's rule, Park's success is quite the surprise. But as David Pilling, wrote in the Financial Times, she has walked a fine line between repudiating her father's crackdown on democracy advocates without upsetting Korean reverence for familial piety.
Date: Dec 14, 2012
Category: World
Source: Google
Why India needs a Malala to promote girls' education?
Answering the question, David Pilling, Asia editor of the Financial Times writes, "Study after study shows that it does. Female literacy improves health and enables women to assert their legal rights. A recent study in Mexico, Nepal, Venezuela and Zambia found that literate women are far more likely
times from their factories. How the company actually treats their employees is not our concern. In fact, Foxconn has already raised wages and improved welfare for the workers as far as we understand, and as David Pilling at FT wrote, Foxconn is probably a better employer than many of its peers.