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World-renowned numerologist David A. Phillips shows you how to find your true inner self and create a life full of abundance, purpose and joy in this easy-to-understand introduction to numerology. This 21-day guide will teach you how to interpret your Birth Chart, discover your Ruling Number, set up your Number Pyramid and compile your Name Chart.
Numerology is a practice that provides direct knowledge of the inner self through numerical information and your birth chart. It can help you to relate better to other people, become more emotionally and financially secure, maintain good health, and live a thoroughly loving life. Above all, it can offer you a determined, successful and joyous course through life. In this in-depth, accessible guide, you'll discover- What the numbers on your birth chart mean and how they can help influence your life for the better How to find your ultimate purpose with your Ruling Number How to set up and interpret a Number Pyramid in order to create a well-balanced life The numerological power and meaning of names, and how to compile your Name Chart This is the perfect introduction to a useful, insightful practice, now presented in a format that fits your life. Use numerology to discover your inner self and purpose in just 21 days!
“Development Without Aid” opens up perspectives and analyzes facts about foreign aid to the poorest developing countries. The discussion is advocacy as much as analysis, and makes extensive reference to recent research, including the author’s previous work on the World Bank.Starting from a perception about development formed during the author’s formative years in what is now Malawi, the book develops a critique of foreign aid as an alien resource inherently unable to provide the necessary dynamism to propel the poorest countries out of poverty, and compromised by profound anomalies which subvert its own effectiveness. The book aims to help move the perception of development in poor countries squarely beyond foreign aid and beyond the discussion of its role, architecture and design, and to re-assert an indigenous development path out of poverty.To move beyond foreign aid, the book examines a new international dynamic, i.e., the rapid growth of the world’s diasporas as a quasi-indigenous resource of increasing strength in terms of both financial and human capital. It considers the extent to which such resources might be able to replace the apparatus of foreign aid and help move towards a reassertion of sovereignty by poor states, especially in Africa, over their own development process.
In the many studies of the World Bank, a critical issue has been missed. While writers have looked at the Bank's political economy, lending, conditions, advice, ownership and accounting for issues such as the environment, this study looks at the Bank as an organization - whether it is set up to do the job it is supposed to do and, if not, what should be done about it. This book is about the problems of organization and reorganization as much as it is about the problems of assisting third-world development, and it is a case study in flawed organizational reform as much as a critique of the way development assistance is managed. It covers the period that starts at the time of the first major reorganization, in 1987 under President Barber Conable, and ends at the time of the resignation of Paul Wolfowitz, in 2007, but it focuses especially on what happened during the tenure of James Wolfensohn.
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