Germany makes day care a national priority
Legislation has made day care more accessible and is changing the way the country views working women.
Legislation has made day care more accessible and is changing the way the country views working women.
The city’s city-to-city diplomatic network spans from Bogota to Moscow. How do cities make the cut?
We’ll discuss human rights abuses committed by the Mexican army in the state of Nuevo Leon, Mexico and tell you where to find a festival that combines mariachi music and tequila on Weekend Passport.
Wednesday on Worldview: Political chaos in Egypt, a guitar legend of the Arab world and Brazil’s “most endangered tribe” fights for its survival.
Cairo-based journalist Ashraf Khalil joins us from Tahrir Square to discuss the latest news from Egypt; film contributor Milos Stehlik argues in defense of director Billy Wilder; and Weekend Passport heads deep into the heart of Scotland.
We try and shed some light on the problem of air travel safety in the developing world. Then, Milos Stehlik reviews the new film by Sacha Baron Cohen. And, we share our receommndations for your weekend–from Burma to belly dancing–with Weekend Passport.
When the revolution began in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, music played a big fole in galvanizing young people and giving them a voice. So it’s not surprising that music continues to play an important role in Egyptian politics as the presidential candidates began their campaigns.
We talk with Mexico scholar John Ackerman about the potential consequences of a PRI comeback in Mexico. Then, Father Alejandro Solalinde, a Mexican priest and migrant advocate who fled the country after receiving death threats, tells us why he left – and why he plans to return.