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In today's podcast, we will discuss a court case involving a leukemia patient from Jiangsu who got him into trouble by buying generic drugs from India via mail order.
In today's podcast, the Red Cross Society of China is plunged back into allegations of fraud in yet another scandal to befall the charity organization.
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi emphasized the importance of rule of law in building national unity and improving her nation's fledging economy.
With few formal financial services in place to facilitate remittances across China, how are the country's millions of migrant workers sending money home? Reboot's Patrick Ainslie talks to us about the risks migrant workers face using informal remittance
Matt Ferchen and Margaret Myers on China Development Bank's loans-for-oil deal, what a shift in power could mean for China, and concerns about how US influence could impact Chinese deals in the region.
We talk to experts and environmental advocates about the recent air pollution crisis, and how there is still a surprising lack of awareness among ordinary Chinese citizens about the impact of PM2.5 pollutants on their lives.
Despite high-profile lawsuits and popular allegations that the U.S. is exercising protectionism, 2012 will be a record year for Chinese investment in the U.S. In this episode, we look at both changing global flows in FDI, as well as the specific trend of
China has often been in the headlines for the harvesting of organs from death-row inmates as well as for the black market for organ trading. Despite recent efforts to stamp out these problems, there is still no sustainable system in place to pick up the
As Muddy Waters' Carson Block says he's no longer looking at China, Caixin's U.S. correspondent Ni Weifeng discusses how short seller reports have hurt Chinese companies looking to list abroad, and why fighting back isn't the most effective reaction.