Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pre | persons and deprive the world of the possibility of peace.~
2 Intro | to justice and peace in a world like ours, marked by so
3 Intro | have the problems of the world of agriculture and general
4 I (9) | effects on poverty, see: World Bank, World Development
5 I (9) | poverty, see: World Bank, World Development Report 1990,
6 I (9) | Washington, D.C., pp. 58-60; World Bank, World Development
7 I (9) | pp. 58-60; World Bank, World Development Report 1991,
8 I (11)| distribution of wealth, see: World Bank, World Development
9 I (11)| wealth, see: World Bank, World Development Report 1991,
10 I (12)| countries. See, for example: World Bank, World Development
11 I (12)| for example: World Bank, World Development Report 1991,
12 I (13)| Cf. UNDP, World Human Development Report
13 I (14)| Paul II, Address to the World Food Summit organised by
14 I (14)| FAO, Rome Declaration on World Food Security and World
15 I (14)| World Food Security and World Food Summit Plan of Action,
16 I (14)| Pontifical Council Cor Unum, World Hunger, A Challenge for
17 I (14)| Agriculture, Rome 1995, p. 16; World Bank, Poverty and Hunger,
18 I (15)| environmental degradation, see: World Bank, World Development
19 I (15)| degradation, see: World Bank, World Development Report 1990,
20 I (15)| Report 1990, pp. 71-73; World Bank, World Development
21 I (15)| pp. 71-73; World Bank, World Development Report 1992,
22 II,1 | tells of the creation of the world and of the human person: "
23 II,6 | the principle that "the world is given to all, and not
24 III,5 | complexity of the modern-day world without excessive costs.
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