China: Guangzhou School for the Blind
At the Guangzhou School for the Blind, the principal is seeking more diverse job training.
At the Guangzhou School for the Blind, the principal is seeking more diverse job training.
Former bomb shelters and dank basements are now home to hundreds of thousands of rural migrants seeking to forge a new life in China's booming capital.
The filmmakers behind the documentary "Down to the Countryside" discuss China's rapidly disappearing rural villages.
Looking beyond Bishan Project, this map illustrates 50 "back-to-the-land" efforts across China.
The largest special education school in China contains state-of-the-art facilities, and many of its students have won national awards. Yet beneath its shiny infrastructure lies an uncertain future.
Unlike many other students with disabilities in China, deaf students have the opportunity to go to school and attend college. Yet even parents and teachers don’t see them as equal members of society.
At the same time China is rapidly urbanizing, a new documentary explores how some former city-dwellers are trying to revitalize the countryside.
Follow an artist and curator who moved from Beijing to the village of Bishan to try to preserve and revitalize local heritage, develop the rural economy, and bring art and culture to the countryside
Dr. Lü describes her first visits to the Tibetan area and how that led to the research on sacred lakes and mountains that she and her students carried out and published in 2013.
PBS NewsHour reports on the surprising embrace by China's officially atheist government of cultural traditions such as Buddhism.
Searching for Sacred Mountain explores the increasing interactions between religion and environment in China.
An unlikely partnership between religion and government may hold the answer to China's growing environmental crisis.