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In the 1960s, the world was divided into "developed -- or Western" and "developing" Hans Rosling says the division was relevant in terms of wealth, education and life expectancy ...
With facts, toys and good humor, the Swedish doctor and statistician helped people understand what numbers tell us about the world.
Hans Rosling is probably the only academic who ends his PowerPoint presentation by swallowing a sword. ... showing the development of the countries over time, ... and there should always be a gap.
Hans Rosling, a Swedish professor of global health and well-known public educator, has died aged 68, his Gapminder foundation has announced. Mr Rosling was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer a year ...
In the 1960s, the world was divided into "developed -- or Western" and "developing" Hans Rosling says the division was relevant in terms of wealth, education and life expectancy ...
Hans Rosling, the medical doctor, professor of international health and statistician who found joy in hard facts, died on Tuesday from pancreatic cancer in Uppsala, Sweden, surrounded by family ...
He called himself an "edutainer." He had a knack for explaining difficult concepts — global inequality, climate change, disease and poverty. He used maps, humor and props like storage boxes and ...
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