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Asia-Pacific Population Journal
Untitled Document

Information Note/Press releases

15 November 2006
Information Note No. N/42/2006

Asia-Pacific Population Journal celebrates 20th anniversary

1986-2006: Twenty Years of Progress in the Field of Population and Development

Bangkok (United Nations Information Services) – The Asia-Pacific Population Journal has documented knowledge and thinking in the field of population and development in the region for over 20 years.

In print since March 1986, the Asia-Pacific Population Journal, published by ESCAP with financial support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) is a highly respected publication in which leading experts share their evidence-based findings, theories and opinions on population and development in the region. The Journal appears three times a year and is disseminated free of charge to an influential audience of policy makers, programmes planners and researchers in over 75 countries. The web-based version of the Journal, accessible in full text at www.unescap.org/appj.asp recently enjoyed a surge of popularity with over 180,000 visitors a month on average in 2006, representing a fivefold increase since 2005.
The Asia-Pacific Population Journal will mark its 20th anniversary this year. Among other events to mark this landmark anniversary, a special commemorative issue has been prepared which focuses on 20 years of progress in the field of population and development. It received contributions from prominent experts in the field, including Mrs. Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA and award-winning demographers John C. Caldwell from the Australian National University and Mercedes B. Concepcion from the University of the Philippines.
Numerous thought-provoking and forward-looking articles on a wide range of topics, from population and development issues to population ageing, international migration and reproductive health have filled the publication history of the Journal, contributed by world-class authors alike as well as by uncelebrated researchers in smaller countries of the Asian and Pacific region.

“The various issues of the Asia-Pacific Population Journal published over the past two decades are a faithful mirror of the evolving trends and issues discussed in the field of population and development in the region”, commented Keiko Osaki, Editor and Chief, Population and Social Integration Section, Emerging Social Issues Division, ESCAP. “The Journal has gone from strength to strength and carved an undisputed niche for itself in the field of population and development”.

The special 20th anniversary issue of the Asia-Pacific Population Journal will be launched during a reception on Monday 20th November at the Shangri-La Hotel in Bangkok, on the eve of the 2006 International Parliamentarians’ Conference on the Implementation of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Programme of Action to take place at the United Nations Conference Centre on 21st and 22nd November.
For further information, please contact:

Mr. David Lazarus
Chief, United Nations Information Services, Bangkok
Tel: (+662) 288 –1862; Fax: (+662) 288-1052
E-mail: unisbkk.unescap@un.org


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24 January 2006
Press Release No: N/03/2006


Focus on migration in special issue of Asia-Pacific Population Journal

Bangkok (United Nations Information Services) – “Migration is the critical population issue of our time”, states Ronald Skeldon, Professorial Fellow in Geography, University of Sussex, United Kingdom in a Viewpoint article published in the Asia-Pacific Population Journal, December 2005 issue.
Recent trends in international migration in Asia and the Pacific, migration trends and patterns in South Asia, social issues in the management of labour migration, impact of migrant remittances, child migrants and children of migrants in Thailand , are among various issues addressed by eminent migration experts in the December 2005 issue of the Journal .

Published three times a year by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) with financial support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the Asia-Pacific Population Journal is a highly respected publication, in which leading population experts share their opinion and action-oriented research findings and provide clear policy recommendations regarding population and development issues in the region.
The Journal , including the December 2005 special issue on migration is available online, in full-text and for free at www.unescap.org/esid/psis/population/journal/index.asp
Subscription to e-alerts is possible from the above-mentioned URL.
Migration “remains the most complex and intractable of the population variables from both an analytical and a policy point of view”, Ronald Skeldon said.
“The situation of children of migrants in Thailand has not received the attention it warrants from government policy makers, government and programme planners, international organizations and social researchers”, Jerrold W. Huguet, private consultant, Bangkok and Sureeporn Punpuing, Associate Professor, Institute for Population and Social Research, Mahidol Universitey state in their article, which reviews the scant knowledge about children of migrants and migrant children in Thailand, tackles school enrolment and birth registration issues and gives practical policy recommendations to improve the situation.

Equally stimulating, the article entitled “Raising Our Awareness: Getting to Grips with Trafficking in Persons and Related Problems in South-East Asia and Beyond” by Phil Marshall, Senior Advisor, United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking, challenges the status quo. “Despite unprecedented growth in programmes and policies to combat trafficking in persons, the problem is generally believed to be getting worse. It is therefore timely to review the overall impact that those programmes are having, and, in particular, the way they are conceived”, the author states, highlighting important problems in the anti-trafficking response.


For further information, please contact:
Mr. David Lazarus
Chief, United Nations Information Services, Bangkok
Tel: (+662) 288 –1862; Fax: (+662) 288-1052
E-mail: unisbkk.unescap@un.org


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30 April 2007

Older persons’ AIDS knowledge in Cambodia, antenatal care services in Afghanistan featured in Asia-Pacific Population Journal

In the global fight against HIV/AIDS, most efforts to promote awareness and knowledge of the disease have been oriented towards youth or prime age adults with little or no attempt to reach older persons. However, older persons remain at risk of infection and are, indirectly, greatly affected by the pandemic as parents and primary caregivers for AIDS patients in the developing world.

An article published in the April 2007 issue of the Asia-Pacific Population Journal turns the spotlight on older persons’ AIDS knowledge and willingness to provide care in Cambodia, a country with one of the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rates in Asia. The article argues that older persons have considerable potential to contribute to the effort to deal with the pandemic.

Considering that knowledge about HIV/AIDS is lower for older persons than younger adults, the article suggests that adequately informing older persons about AIDS is crucial for efforts to combat and cope with the disease. Correct knowledge about the disease would reduce unfounded fear of contagion associated with caregiving.

“Older persons in Cambodia – and elsewhere in the developing world – not only are commonly the main caregivers for their sons and daughters who become infected but also have potential to influence their adult children to avoid risky behaviour”.

The article demonstrates that an “effective route for the Government of Cambodia and NGOs to improve AIDS knowledge among Cambodian elderly would be to facilitate ownership of radios or televisions by those who do not have them”. The likely impact of such an approach is enhanced by the fact that Cambodia is currently preparing a new campaign through the mass media to provide information about HIV/AIDS, according to the authors of the article.

Very rarely featured in the Asia-Pacific Population Journal, Afghanistan is the focus of the second article published in this same issue of the Journal. Recovering from decades of conflict, Afghanistan has one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world.

The article explores the inaccessibility and utilization of antenatal health-care services in the northern Balkh province of the country. “Regardless of the increasing availability of reproductive health services in recent years, poor women in the remote villages of the province continue to suffer from lack of access to services”, the article notes.
“This study clearly shows that inaccessibility, illiteracy, poverty and involvement of pregnant women in economic activities were major barriers to the use of antenatal care”.

The article recommends, among others, expanding mobile clinic services in order to significantly raise the coverage and reduce the inequality in the use of antenatal care services.

Issued three times a year by UNESCAP with financial support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the Asia-Pacific Population Journal is a highly respected publication in which leading population experts share opinion and action-oriented research findings. Articles published in the Journal provide clear policy recommendations on population and development issues in the region.

The online version of the Journal receives over 150,000 hits a month. The April 2007 issue of the Asia-Pacific Population Journal is available from http://www.unescap.org/appj.asp, along with the entire and searchable collection of the publication, in print since 1986.

For further information, please contact:

Or
Ms. Wanphen Sreshthaputra
Asia-Pacific Population Journal
Emerging Social Issues Division,
UNESCAP
Tel: (+662) 288-1586; Fax: (+662) 288-1009
Mobile: 081 824 38 25
E-mail: escap-population@un.org

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