COUNTRY EXAMPLES
 AND BOXES

I.1: Nepal asks why some people live without dignity
1.1: Proposing alternative policies through popular consultation in Laos
1.2: Building acceptance of choices in Viet Nam
1.3: National ownership in a country in conflict
1.4: Chile selects a theme that’s on everyone’s mind
2.1: Panama’s HDR process opens new avenues of communication
2.2: Key responsibilities of a typical HDR team
2.3: Citizen participation in Bulgaria’s HDR process
2.4: Bolivia boosts political capabilities for human development
2.5: Some basic feedback practices
2.6: Indonesia develops three tiers of feedback
2.7: Potential target audiences
2.8: The Arab 2002 HDR makes a regional impact
4.1: The eightfold path - a practical guide to analysing policies
4.2: In the midst of crisis, Indonesia explores governance
4.3: Transition for different generations
4.4: Two reports call HIV/AIDS the most critical human development challenge
4.5: Georgia’s HDR turns to quantitative and qualitative tools
4.6: Chile tries a perception survey
4.7: The 2002 global HDR discusses conversion to PPP rates of exchange
4.8: The Dominican Republic re-examines poverty measurement
4.9: Adapting indexes for short-term priorities in Thailand
4.10: The Arab region’s alternative HDI
4.11: Kosovo devises strategies to gather data
4.12: Disaggregation reveals inequalities by caste, ethnicity and region
4.13: Improving indexes and local governance in Bulgaria
4.14: Two potential development scenarios in China
4.15: In Jordan, a focus on youth
4.16: Exploring the heart of Latvia’s political culture
5.1: Bolivia’s 2002 HDR features a bilingual summary
5.2: Tasks of the editor
5.3: Thailand’s 2003 HDR tells the story of local concerns
5.4: Mozambique’s 2001 HDR explores creative translations
5.5: Which visual enhancements to use when, and what to show
5.6: Making numbers tell the story
5.7: Lebanon, Poland and Paraguay devised striking and colourful covers
5.8: Nepal’s 2001 HDR illustrates human development indexes across three ecological and five administrative regions
5.9: Viet Nam’s 2001 HDR portrays HDI variances by province
5.10: Global HDR 2003 brings home powerful messages with simple visuals
5.11: Indonesia’s 2001 HDR traces the impact of the economic crisis by linking the HDI and GDI
5.12: The 2002 Arab regional HDR employs different tools to stress its main points
5.13: A dynamic Web site for the 2003 regional HDR on the Roma
5.14: Egypt’s interactive database generates customized maps with disaggregated data
6.1: How HDRs make an impact
6.2: Basic steps of an outreach strategy
6.3: Potential constituencies
6.4: Incentives for development reporting
6.5: Chile’s 2002 HDR sets the stage for results
6.6: The main ingredients of a press kit
6.7: Listing a report Web site with search engines
6.8: The parts of a publishing agreement