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Is the goal of an end to the HIV/Aids pandemic by 2030 really possible? Read more
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An end to Aids?
Is the goal of an end to the HIV/Aids pandemic by 2030 really possible?
Caught at the Helm
Are Greece's tough people smuggling policies seeing the wrong people pay the price?
Iraq's secret women's shelters
The dangerous and secretive work of the Iraqi women helping victims of domestic violence
The jaguar's last stand
James Harper explores a battle between business and conservation threatening the jaguar
Tongue and talk: Keeping language alive in Africa
Justice Baidoo explores endangered languages like Twi and Ahanta across Africa
Tuvalu: The first digital nation?
With its future under threat from rising sea levels, how can Tuvalu preserve its culture?
Poisoned floods: South Sudan life at 50°C
BBC Eye investigates the legacy of oil in the northern states of South Sudan
The 10 years that changed women's football
How women's football has boomed in the past decade, and what challenges still lie ahead
Faith on the fly: The airport chaplains
Spend a week with the chaplains of Heathrow Airport ing engers and staff
Life at 50°C: Syria's water wars
Why the people of once-fertile, north-east Syria have almost no drinking water
The Conflict: Middle East
What can history teach us about the conflict in the Middle East?
Amapiano: The sound of South Africa
South African DJ Legendary Crisp charts the rise of the Amapiano music genre
Me and my digital twin
Ghislaine Boddington investigates the possibility of life after death through digital AI
Blood on the shelves
How tomato paste made with forced labour in China is likely to be in supermarkets
Over the fence: From Turkey into the EU
How more people are reaching the EU from Turkey, and the efforts to stop them
Ready to transmit
Contestants from around the world gather in Tunisia to send Morse code at incredible speed
The Watermelons: Myanmar's military moles
The soldiers spying for the enemy
Srebrenica’s forgotten refugees
Why those who fled the atrocities of Bosnia’s war are still living as refugees 30 years on
Footprints: Why did human feet start washing up on the west coast of Canada and the US?
Since 2007, more than 20 human feet have washed up on the shores of Canada and the US
The street that tech built
Are new technology and hyper-tourism changing the Italian city of Florence forever?
Americast - Jimmy Carter
Former US President Jimmy Carter has died aged 100.
The dogs of Palermo
How the Sicilian city of Palermo embraces the stray dogs living on its streets
Built different: Why women athletes suffer ACL injuries more than males
Lianne Sanderson explores the science and solutions for ACL injuries in female athletes
Canadian Immigration: Boom or Bust?
Canada has a proud history of immigration. Why do some now want to close its doors?
Israel's Unrwa ban
What will it mean for Palestinians if Israel bans Unrwa, the UN agency that provides aid?
Child soldiers and capoeira
How former child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo are using capoeira to heal
Licence to operate a space object
The night sky holds so much power, why are we not fighting harder to protect it?
Saudi and Trans: Eden’s final message
After a Saudi trans woman’s death went viral, BBC Eye investigates her final months
Paths of return: A special homecoming to Sierra Leone
A group of African Americans are in Sierra Leone for a very special homecoming
Prison of the mind
In Sweden and the Netherlands a mental-health first approach to justice is beneficial
Songs from Auschwitz
A story of hope, music and survival from Auschwitz.