Earth Focus: Can Religion Save the Environment?
Filmmakers Kalyanee Mam and Gary Marcuse speak about their films "Fight for Areng Valley" and "Searching for Sacred Mountain" on LinkTV's Earth Focus.
Filmmakers Kalyanee Mam and Gary Marcuse speak about their films "Fight for Areng Valley" and "Searching for Sacred Mountain" on LinkTV's Earth Focus.
The government closed brothels to clamp down on human trafficking. But that move put the country's prostitutes in grave danger.
Small, affordable motorcycles are transforming life in Southeast Asia, but there is a deadly downside.
The world's most pressing public health crisis isn't AIDS or Ebola or malaria—it's a soaring number of motorcycle fatalities. And it's costing developing countries billions.
A deal between a Chinese hydro company and Cambodian power brokers has put the Areng Valley at risk. Can villagers and activists save it?
A short film edited in remembrance of the journalist Taing Try, who was murdered this week, and the environmental issues Cambodia still faces.
War veteran, amputee and tuberculosis patient Bui Van Thiet lives in stark, voiceless poverty. It’s a prime example of why tuberculosis is a low priority for global health donors.
When Reem Sav See heard Venerable But Buntenh speak at the village meeting, she understood clearly what he was talking about and what the consequences of a hydroelectric dam construction would be.
Buddhist monks in Cambodia are leading a protest to save the environment.
In a remote valley in Cambodia, a group of young monks join the Chong people in a fight to protect their forests, livelihood and heritage from the looming construction of a hydroelectric dam.
Tonle Sap Lake is one of the most productive freshwater ecosystems in the world. But overfishing, climate change and plans to build a hydropower dams could threaten the delicate ecosystem.
Lake Tonle Sap, Cambodia’s “beating heart,” is threatened by the competing needs of a rapidly developing nation. Can a new kind of conservation save it?