![]() While during its peak period copper used to fetch as much as USD 9,000 to USD 10,000 per ton, it was now going for just under USD 4,000. Copper makes up 90% of national revenue, and by September 2008 its price on the London Metal Exchange had crashed. Zambia was one of the early casualties of the world economic meltdown. The 2009 National Budget is in denial and Parliament is not paying attention. The Government’s reaction to the effects of the crisis has been both predictable and disappointing. Although for the past 45 years politicians have promised to diversify into other products, almost nothing has been done. The global economic meltdown is already seriously affecting Zambia, which is highly dependent on the production and price of copper, its primary export. (to be included only in the SW 2009 – Overview version)Įdición hecha al amparo del Art. Any other form of reproduction, storage in a retrieval system or transmission by any means for commercial purposes requires prior permission from ITeM. The content of this publication may be reproduced by non-governmental organizations for non-commercial purposes (please send us copies). ![]() The contents of this publication are the sole responsibility of its authors and of the Social Watch network and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union, Oxfam Novib and the Ford Foundation. This publication has been produced with the assistance of the European Union, Oxfam Novib and the Ford Foundation. Made possible thanks to the funding and support of the European Commission, Oxfam Novib and the Ford Foundation. Soledad Bervejillo, Marcela Dutra, Bachir El Omari, Ana Fostik, Susana Ibarburu, Emilie Jung, Richard Manning, María Laura Mazza, Alexandra Potts, Álvaro Queiruga, Alejandra Trellesġ8 de Julio 1077/ 903, Montevideo 11100, +598 (2) 902 0490 ext.113 Social Sciences Research Team, Departamento de Sociologíaĭe la Facultad de Ciencias Sociales de la Universidad de la República, Uruguay The International Secretariat of Social Watch is based in Montevideo, Uruguay, hosted by the Third World Institute (ITeM). Nancy Baroni (Canada), Leonor Briones (Philippines), Anas El Hasnaoui (Morocco), Javier Gómez (Bolivia), Arjun Karki (Nepal), Thida Khus (Cambodia), Edward Oyugi (Kenya), Iara Pietricovsky (Brazil), Ziad Abdel Samad (Lebanon), Areli Sandoval (Mexico), Alexandra Spieldoch (United States), Genoveva Tisheva (Bulgaria), Mirjam van Reisen (European Union) and Roberto Bissio (Uruguay, ex officio). 10-day trial versions are available for both.Emily Joy Sikazwe (Zambia) and Jens Martens (Germany), co-chairs. PDF Shaper Premium costs $19.95, while PDF Shaper Pro costs $29.95. PDF Shaper Free 8.2 is available now as a freeware download for PCs running Windows XP or later. There’s also the promise of improved text detection and extraction. Version 8.2’s three new watermarking options allow users to numerate pages in a PDF document, add multi-line text watermarks and mix image, text and page numbers on the same page.Ī number of bugs have been fixed - including one that rotated the first page even if it was skipped. Handy extras include being able to preview PDFs after selection and change the running order of files being processed. Choose the file (or files) to process, tweak settings via the Options tab and click Process. The app is easy to use: select a tool and then a new window opens. The Pro version also adds an external PDF viewer with print capabilities as well as OCR support. Premium and Pro users gain the Watermarks tool, plus tools for creating PDFs from Word documents as well as protecting PDF documents from being extracted. Users can also extract and delete pages as well as crop and rotate them, while the final tab - Security - provides a range of tools including the ability to add, update or strip metadata from PDFs. The Content tab allows users to split or merge multiple PDFs, plus extract images and text, as well as strip images. ![]() PDF Shaper Free offers 17 individual tools, split into four categories: Documents, Content, Pages and Security.ĭocuments provides a series of conversion tools to and from PDF, with options including processing only a selection of pages and choosing an image format and DPI for output. ![]() All versions gain support for system TrueType fonts, codepages and styles as well as an option to select specific pages when converting a PDF to an image file. It’s the paid-for editions that get the most love in this new release, with the non-free Watermark tool gaining three new features.
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