A selection of programmes and clips relating to China.
Looking for love in a country where there will soon be 24 million bachelors.
Shanghai-based journalist Duncan Hewitt finds out how microblogging is changing China.
Roger begins his tour of Chinese museums in Shanghai, with a visit to an opera museum.
Carrie Gracie goes in search of the cult of the Almighty God and its terrified victims.
Peter Day explores two very contrasting enclaves in China.
Mary Ann Sieghart profiles Chinese artist and activist, Ai Weiwei.
Historical photographs are rare in China, but now the pictured past is being reclaimed.
Peter Day travels to China to ask why so many graduates are having difficulty finding jobs
The empire builder who thought he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ.
Mukul Devichand tells the stories of Shanghai's rapidly ageing population.
Edward Stourton retraces the route of Mao's Long March, to mark its 80th anniversary.
In China 're-education' is still used as a form of punishment - hear one man's story.
Rana Mitter discovers the unexpected thinking behind China's welfare state.
Carrie Gracie presents a series exploring ten great lives from Chinese history.
History's verdict on the man who left the terracotta warriors and a mighty empire.
A portrait of pre Chinese Tibet through the voices of the British who worked there.
Martin Jacques presents a personal view on how best to understand contemporary China.
People power has long been promised. With the internet, is it finally here?
Class war in 11th century China: the rise and fall of a brilliant bureaucrat.
Carrie Gracie explores why China's children still quote two drunkards from the 8th century
It is said that one sister loved money, one loved power and one loved her country.
Roger continues his journey through Shanghai, visiting a bank museum and a tobacco museum.
Ed Stourton finds out if the Battle of Luding Bridge lives up to its mythical status.
The lasting legacy of the March and how its roots still reach to the highest levels.