More and more wealthy and famous people, such as artists, popstars are violating the one child policy. Zengying feels that such kind of open violation of policy is a reflection of social inequality (zh).
Photographer Damoncoulter presents some pictures of the Secondhand Book Fair in Shimbashi (Tokyo).
In the heart of the Tokyo business district, the fair (held in middle November) was mostly attended by “salarymen” looking for rare pieces of literature to read on the way home.
China Hush has a blog post on a new selection system adopted by Peking university to pick up talented students.
Cochina posts a series of videos showing yesterday's protest against the construction of garbage incinerator in Guangzhou Panyu. ESWN has translated the details of the protest.
Get summaries of new stories from Global Voices in your inbox daily, weekly, or just sign up for important announcements.
Bhutan: Shangri-La or Ethnic Cleanser?
Egypt and Algeria: Much More Than a Football Match
South Africa: Sesame Street's HIV-Positive Muppet ...
Translated every day by Lingua volunteers:
This site is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
Please read our attribution policy.
Based on the Wikipedia list of countries, details.


















Actually it the very rich and very poor are violate the policy. The policy say you violated, you lose your job and pay a fine. The very rich are self employeed, they do not worry about job and money. The very poor have neither, nothing to lose. The middle class are the good law bidding citizen.