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The World Bank's goal is to end extreme poverty and to grow income for the poorest people on the planet.

The bank does this by lending money and giving grants to governments and private corporations in some of the least developed places on the planet. For example, money goes to preserving land, building dams and creating health care systems.

But a lot of poor people actually end up worse off because of those projects, a report from The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists found.

People are often displaced, or their livelihoods are ruined. Over the past decade an estimated 3.4 million people have been displaced by bank-funded projects, says Michael Hudson, a senior editor at ICIJ, who worked on the report. In one instance, hundreds of families had their homes burned down.

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Dr. Jim Yong Kim became president of the World Bank in 2012. He is the first bank president who to come from the global health sector. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Dr. Jim Yong Kim became president of the World Bank in 2012. He is the first bank president who to come from the global health sector.

Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

"The World Bank has promised 'do no harm,' but our reporting has found that the World Bank has broken this promise," Hudson says.

In response, the World Bank says the vast majority of its projects don't involve the resettlement of people. But the bank says it has identified shortcomings in its resettlement policies. And it plans to improve those policies to protect people and businesses affected by bank-funded projects.

ICIJ's Hudson spoke to NPR's Steve Inskeep on Morning Edition about the new report, which he and his team worked on with The Huffington Post and other outlets.

A lot of these projects seem beneficial. But you found that something is going wrong. What is it?

What is often going wrong is what happens to people on the ground when you do these big projects. When you build a big dam, that can have huge consequences for the people living along the banks of the rive and people who make their living via subsistence fishing or farming along the river bank. A mega dam can affect 50,000, even a 100,000 people.

What happens to the people displaced?

In some cases they may have to move. Or they may lose part of their land. In other cases, they may not be physically displaced but rather economically displaced because their livelihoods have been destroyed, or at least partly impacted.

Parallels

The World Bank Gets An Overhaul — And Not Everyone's Happy

If you make your living fishing from the river or along the coast, and a power plant or dam affects the ecosystem, there's fewer fish, and you're not catching as many. Then your livelihood and your ability to feed your family has been impacted.

The problem is that even resettlements that are done well and fairly often leave poor people even poorer. There's a lot of research that shows that people who are forced to move suffer higher rates of hunger, illness and early death. It causes really serious consequences for people.

You write about a land conservation project in Kenya. What went wrong there?

The land conservation project funneled money to the Kenyan forest service with the idea of preserving a forest in western Kenya. The problem is with the thousands of indigenous people — the Sengwer — living in the forest. Our reporting on the ground shows that hundreds, and perhaps as many as a thousand, homes have been burned by the Kenyan forest service as they try to evict people from the forest.

When you brought these cases to the World Bank's attention, how did they react?

Around the first of March, we told the bank that our reporting had found systemic gaps in its protection for displaced families. Days later, the bank announced that it had found major problems with how it handles resettlement and released an action plan to fix the problem.

The bank has also released internal reports going back several years, which show the bank often had violated its own rules, has failed to protect people, has failed to monitor what happens to them and hasn't held its part as accountable for their actions.

Is it inevitable, on some level, that people may be harmed when you replace a low-level economy with a corner of the global economy via these projects?

There's always a price tag for development. But the question is: Who should pay the price? Should poor people be the ones who sacrifice when the government tries to do a big project? Even the World Bank says the budget for a project should include money to cover people's losses, that you can't just show up at someone's house and tell them to leave, that there has to be a process and that people have to be made whole.

global development

World Bank

Kenya

четверг

A certain kind of book seems practically written to be adapted into a musical. Phantom of the Opera, for example, or Wicked. Then there's Fun Home, based on a graphic novel by a middle-aged lesbian cartoonist that grapples with themes of suicide, shame and familial dysfunction. Fun Home was a bestselling book, then a smash off-Broadway hit at the Public Theater.

The memoir, by Alison Bechdel, takes its title from her family's sardonic nickname for their business — a funeral home. It delves into the mystery around her father's suicide, which took place around 1980. Bechdel, then a student at Oberlin College, had just come out to her parents as a lesbian — and learned her father was a deeply closeted gay man.

Bechdel agrees that the book is not exactly the most obvious source material for a musical.

"I thought it was crazy," she tells NPR about her reaction when the idea was first broached. "I didn't know how it was even possible."

Related NPR Stories

The Two-Way

Book News: A Q&A With Alison Bechdel, Cartoonist And MacArthur Winner

Author Interviews

A Portrait Of The Cartoonist And Her Mother

Alison Bechdel's Family Life? Tragicomic

But composer Jeanine Tesori, best known for writing the music for Caroline, Or Change and Shrek The Musical immediately responded to the story about an artistic but repressed and unhappy family.

"I knew that it was a singing piece," she said during an interview in her Manhattan office. "You could just hear it. All of the songs — they sing their desires and what's being held back."

Far more challenging Tesori says, was figuring out how to tell Bechdel's story without using her cartoons, which the creative team tried hard to incorporate in earlier versions.

"Oh my god, we had so many songs about her drawing, remember?" she says. "I mean, we had songs and songs and songs."

Tesori's talking to her collaborator, Lisa Kron, a playwright and longtime member of the downtown theater collective the Five Lesbian Brothers. Kron spent decades writing plays about lesbians back when they were practically invisible in popular culture — let alone on Broadway. It took Tesori and Kron seven years to create Fun Home the musical, but Kron thinks the timing ended up being perfect when the show opened off Broadway a year and a half ago.

"There was a critical mass of images of lesbians in the culture," she says. "So this could move forward in this way, that the audience would have the scaffolding that they could place this in.

"Ring of Keys," from Fun Home

That scaffolding allows for a show tune based on a moment when the main character realizes her sexual difference. Alison Bechdel, only about nine years old, is with her dad in a diner, when she notices a butch delivery woman, and is transfixed by everything about her. The song is called "Ring of Keys."

While writing the lyrics, Lisa Kron resisted cultural assumptions about masculine woman as unattractive or as punchlines. She found language that told a different truth. The 11-year-old who sings it became the youngest Obie winner in off-Broadway history. Sydney Lucas originated the role of "Small Alison" off-Broadway when she was only nine.

"Lesbian woman have come to see the show and say they remember that in their childhoods," Lucas says in her dressing room, referring to that moment of epiphany. "It's cool."

Lucas is one of three actors who play Bechdel at various points in her life. It's a cultural watershed for Broadway to feature a lesbian main character, says Lisa Kron, partly because musicals bring an unequaled sense of romance and empathy to their protagonists.

"There is nothing that gets in your bloodstream like that thing," she says. "So to have not just a lesbian but a butch lesbian be that person? That is a big moment."

The real Alison Bechdel is having quite a moment herself. In the past few years, Swedish movie theaters adopted a ratings system based on what's become known as " the Bechdel test." (That's when a movie features more than one female character ... and they talk to each other ... about something other than a man.) The book Fun Home has become required reading on many college campuses. And recently, Bechdel won both a Guggenheim Fellowship and a MacArthur "genius grant."

"My life is so crazy lately," Bechdel confesses.

Just a decade ago, Bechdel was best known for a beloved but relatively obscure cartoon series called Dykes to Watch Out For that ran in gay and alternative newspapers for decades. Like Bechdel, Lisa Kron created lesbian-themed work back when it was — by definition — marginal. Now that it's on Broadway and bestseller lists, she believes mainstream lesbian artists face a new challenge.

"We need to pay attention and think who else is out there that we have not seen yet," she says. "Who doesn't feel fully human in the culture. Because there are lots of other people who haven't gotten to this point yet."

In Congress, just like at any storied American institution — McDonald's, New York Fashion Week, the Bush and Clinton families — trends come and go.

The 114th Congress is now 100 days old. And it can be difficult to keep up with the goings and comings of the body and its 535 members — the negotiations, visits from world leaders, the scandals and, oh yeah, the legislation.

So here's our look at what's in and what's out on Capitol Hill:

Have something to add to the list? Tweet @nprpolitics.

IN

Benjamin Netanyahu

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is greeted by members of Congress before speaking to a joint meeting in the House chamber. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is greeted by members of Congress before speaking to a joint meeting in the House chamber.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Netanyahu's address to a joint meeting of Congress caused weeks of controversy after Speaker John Boehner invited him, but didn't tell the White House. Though several Democrats protested the speech, Netanyahu spoke to a packed house.

Bad Blood Gets Worse Between Barack, Bibi And Israel

3 min 58 sec

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Gyrocopter

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An Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician check the gyrocopter that landed on the Capitol's South Lawn Wednesday. Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images

An Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician check the gyrocopter that landed on the Capitol's South Lawn Wednesday.

Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images

The Capitol was on lockdown Wednesday as a postman flew a gyrocopter into the Capitol airspace and landed it on the South Lawn. He's now in custody.

The Two-Way

Postman Carrying Letters For Congress Lands On Capitol Grounds In A Gyrocopter

Doc Fix

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The signatures of House Speaker John Boehner and Sen. Orrin Hatch on the Medicare Access CHIP Reauthorization Act 2015. Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Getty Images

The signatures of House Speaker John Boehner and Sen. Orrin Hatch on the Medicare Access CHIP Reauthorization Act 2015.

Getty Images

On Thursday, the House approved a long-term resolution to how doctors who accept Medicare are paid. It had been a perennial issue. The New York Times calls "the most significant bipartisan policy legislation to pass through that chamber since Republicans regained a majority in 2011."

It's All Politics

Is Capitol Hill Ready To Rest Its Near-Annual 'Doc Fix' Exercise?

Bipartisan Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015

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Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. Bob Corker confers with ranking member Sen. Ben Cardin during a committee markup meeting on the proposed nuclear agreement with Iran. Win McNamee/Getty Images hide caption

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Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. Bob Corker confers with ranking member Sen. Ben Cardin during a committee markup meeting on the proposed nuclear agreement with Iran.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

The bill means the administration must formally submit to Congress the final Iran nuclear agreement. It's bipartisan, it passed, and the president has agreed to sign it.

Politics

Obama, Senate Compromise Gives Congress A Say On Iran Nuclear Deal

Tweeting Iran's Leaders

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Sen. Tom Cotton's tweet to Iran's President Rouhani. Twitter hide caption

itoggle caption Twitter

Sen. Tom Cotton's tweet to Iran's President Rouhani.

Twitter

Sen. Tom Cotton led 46 other senators in writing a letter to Iran's leaders explaining that they "may not fully understand our constitutional system." He said he didn't actually mail the letter, but he did tweet it to President Rouhani (@hassanrouhani).

It's All Politics

47 GOP Senators Tell Iran They May Not Honor A Nuclear Deal

Tom Cotton's Tweet To Iran's President

Diversity

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Utah Rep. Mia Love. Mark Wilson/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Utah Rep. Mia Love.

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Rep. Mia Love is part of the largest class of black Republicans in Congress since Reconstruction. Overall, 17 percent of the 114th Congress is non-white, the largest portion ever. Still, that's lower than the 37 percent of the non-white population overall in the country.

At Critical Juncture, GOP Honors Largest Class Of Black Lawmakers

3 min 44 sec

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Pew: 114th Congress is Most Diverse Ever

Regular Order

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"We need to get committees working again. We need to recommit to a rational, functioning appropriations process," Sen. Mitch McConnell said on the first full day of the new Congress. Susan Walsh/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Susan Walsh/AP

"We need to get committees working again. We need to recommit to a rational, functioning appropriations process," Sen. Mitch McConnell said on the first full day of the new Congress.

Susan Walsh/AP

Sens. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., John McCain, R-Ariz., Ben Cardin, D-Md., and others have called for the glorious return of regular order. Those are the rules and customs of Congress, according to Roll Call, that "constitute an orderly and deliberative policymaking process."

It's All Politics

McConnell's Call For 'Regular Order' May Not Mean What It Used To

Reconciliation, In The Budget Sense

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Reconciliation, like chutes in the popular game, can catapult legislation through the Senate with only 51 votes instead of 60. Ben Husmann/Flickr hide caption

itoggle caption Ben Husmann/Flickr

Reconciliation, like chutes in the popular game, can catapult legislation through the Senate with only 51 votes instead of 60.

Ben Husmann/Flickr

It's a procedural fast track that could allow Republicans get sweeping legislation through the Senate with a simple majority, as NPR's Ailsa Chang reports, For actual, bipartisan reconciliation, "the restoration of friendly relations," see the Out list.

Budget Reconciliation Explained Through Chutes And Ladders

4 min 5 sec

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OUT

Offices Modeled After Downton Abbey

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Media members gather outside of the office of Rep. Aaron Schock after he announced his resignation from Congress on March 17. Lauren Victoria Burke/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Lauren Victoria Burke/AP

Media members gather outside of the office of Rep. Aaron Schock after he announced his resignation from Congress on March 17.

Lauren Victoria Burke/AP

Rep. Aaron Schock resigned after reports of lavish spending, including $40,000 to decorate his Capitol Hill office like the PBS show. Probably not out: TMI Instagram feeds and fudged mileage reports.

Regular Order

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When Mitch McConnell became Senate majority leader, he promised he'd restore what he called regular order in that chamber. But Democrats have been accusing him of violating regular order ever since. Susan Walsh/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Susan Walsh/AP

When Mitch McConnell became Senate majority leader, he promised he'd restore what he called regular order in that chamber. But Democrats have been accusing him of violating regular order ever since.

Susan Walsh/AP

The dreams of restoring regular order were grand, but in the words of George Washington University's Sarah Binder, "It's kind of hard to get back to a Senate where the Senate works in that type of a fluid, collegial place. Because that's just not the world — partisan or ideological — that we live in."

McConnell's Call For 'Regular Order' May Not Mean What It Used To

3 min 30 sec

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Exercise Bands

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House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi starts a news conference by donning dark glasses, a teasingly sympathetic gesture to Reid. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption

itoggle caption J. Scott Applewhite/AP

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi starts a news conference by donning dark glasses, a teasingly sympathetic gesture to Reid.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Resistance bands won't be overtaking P90X as the Congressional exercise of choice, after one broke and seriously injured Sen. Harry Reid.

Bob Menendez

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Sen. Bob Menendez on Capitol Hill Tuesday. Andrew Harnik/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Andrew Harnik/AP

Sen. Bob Menendez on Capitol Hill Tuesday.

Andrew Harnik/AP

He's technically still in, but Sen. Menendez is out as ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee after he was indicted on federal corruption charges. A majority of New Jersey voters say he should resign, but he is professing his innocence and vowing to fight.

Reconciliation, Broader Sense

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House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio kisses Rep. Nancy Pelosi during the opening session of the 114th Congress. Pablo Martinez Monsivais /AP hide caption

itoggle caption Pablo Martinez Monsivais /AP

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio kisses Rep. Nancy Pelosi during the opening session of the 114th Congress.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais /AP

Can't we all just get along? In the first 100 days, the Senate has seen the lowest level of Democratic cosponsorship in 20 years, a New York Times review found. Bill cosponsorship in the House has also dropped compared with previous years.

Congress

Republicans

During WWII, Cretan resistance to the Nazis was augmented by the Special Operations Executive (otherwise known as "The Firm"), Churchill's secret arm of the British military, made up of lone fighters, "poets, professors, archaeologists — anyone who'd traveled a bit and knew is or her way around foreign countries." Dropped behind enemy lines to wreak havoc, these "lethal shadows" fought in tandem with the audacious, all but shoeless resistance. (Weapons of choice: sickles, axes and garden tools.)

MacDougall summons up an entertaining cast of characters: a one-eyed archaeologist named John Pendleburg, the penniless young artist Xan Fielding, and wandering playboy-poet Patrick Leigh Fermor. Then there are the home-grown resistance fighters, daring men with nicknames like "The Clown" — a shepherd turned bandit — the "wind boys" and Scuttle George.

By profiling these atypical commandos, McDougall redefines the heroic ideal, establishing heroism as a skill set rather than a virtue. "For much of human history," he writes, "the art of the hero wasn't left up to chance; it was a multidisciplinary endeavor devoted to optimal nutrition, physical self-mastery, and mental conditioning." Crete, it turns out, has a nickname: "the Island of Heroes."

Long-Distance Runner Was 'Indomitable Seeker'

2 min 25 sec

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At the age of fifty, the author embraces Parkour, or freerunning, beginning by ricocheting off the bricks of a London housing project, loving the sense of flow. He learns about the supreme importance of the fascia, the "powerful connective tissue that is like your body's rubber band," which enable him to effortlessly bounce down mountainsides as he claims the ancient Greeks did. A Paleo diet (the Cretan version: wild greens, snails and boiled hay) allows him to utilize his body's fat for fuel and gives him the ability to scale steep mountaintops.

"The art of the hero," he discovers, "wasn't about being brave; it was about being so competent that bravery wasn't an issue."

The essential narrative here, the twisty tale of a kidnapping that incredibly goes right, is exciting. It is balanced out with the journalistic account of McDougall's entry into the world of the hero. His personal quest to "rewild the psyche" might seem an awkward fit with war storytelling. But under McDougall's sure hand the combination improbably works.

Kind of like kidnapping a German general on an island swarming with Nazi troops.

Read an excerpt of Natural Born Heroes

Jean Zimmerman's latest novel, Savage Girl, is out in paperback. She posts daily at Blog Cabin.

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