20080108

中国失踪女孩(National Geographic)[China'S Lost Girls]

(National Geographic)[China'S Lost Girls]

China's Lost Girls DVD

出品:National Geographic
英文名称:China'S Lost Girls
中文名称:中国失踪女孩
主持:Lisa Ling
地区:美国
类型:记录
出品时间:2004
时长:43分钟
官方网址:
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/
语言:英语
资源类型:DVDRip
文件大小:700MB
下载:
National.Geographic.China'S.Lost.Girls.Divx-Ac3.Mvgroup.Org.avi
详情:
http://www.verycd.com/files/1304c438ad0082ed02dadb116247349e734332928

介绍:
http://www.verycd.com/groups/newsreel/96862.topic

美国国家地理探险小组Lisa Ling日前和领养中国孩子的美国家庭一道访问了中国大陆,就在美国家庭欢欢喜喜抱着领养的中国孩子回美国之际,Lisa Ling 则认真地检视了这个国家一胎化政策和其衍生之诸多复杂问题。

“中国女婴消失了”,国家地理探险主持人 Lisa Ling 研究了这个在中国施行二十年的计划生育政策和结果。为了防止中国人口的爆炸成长,中国限制大部份家庭只能有一个小孩,或者是某些情况下可以有两个小孩。由于文化、社会和经济上的因素,中国人传统上倾向喜欢男孩,所以生下的女婴经常就藏起来或者丢弃,以致成千上万的女婴最后都进了中国各地的孤儿院。

时至今日,美国由海外领养的孩子中有四分之一来自中国大陆,几乎全是女孩。 Lisa Ling 和美国领养家庭一道到美国,分享这些家庭拥有小孩的喜悦,也看到中国在性别上的鸿沟,男孩受到欢迎,女孩则面临被丢弃的命运,妇女都有着非生男孩的压力。

Ling 很快地发现,中国一胎化为核心的计划生育政策还有着其他不好后果,例如,教室里几乎全是男同学,专家预测,几十年后,中国将会有近四千万适婚男人找不到太太,这些男人怎么办?而商店里还会卖有关女生的东西吗?Ling 碰到一位拐卖为人妻的妇女,这种犯罪与日俱增。另一个现象是男孩一生下来就被宠爱,像个“小皇帝”一样侍候。

National Geographic Ultimate Explorer host Lisa Ling examines the consequences of China's two-decades-old ''one-child policy,'' designed to curb the country's exploding population. Due to cultural, social, and economic factors, traditional preference leans toward boys, so girls are often hidden, aborted, or abandoned. As a result, tens of thousands of girls end up in orphanages across China.

Today, more than one quarter of all babies adopted from abroad by American families come from China—and nearly all are girls. Ling joins some of these families as they travel to China to meet their new daughters for the first time. Along this emotional journey, she shares in the joy of these growing families and also witnesses firsthand China's gender gap, its roots, and its possible repercussions.

Join Ultimate Explorer as Ling explores the many complex issues surrounding China's attempt to slow its swelling tide of humanity.

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About Lisa Ling:
Photo: Lisa Ling

National Geographic Channel Correspondent, Explorer

From covering the secret world of the MS-13 gang to going undercover inside North Korea, Lisa Ling examines issues from all around the world as a correspondent for the award-winning documentary series Explorer.

National Geographic Channel correspondent Lisa Ling follows up her critically acclaimed specials about the ultra violent MS-13 gang and the epidemic of methamphetamine with a rare look inside of one the most secretive nations on earth. In Explorer: "Inside North Korea," Ling penetrates the border of North Korea by traveling undercover with a Nepalese eye surgeon on a humanitarian mission, providing a unique look at life on the inside.

Her hard work covering the secret world of the MS-13 gang in the "World's Most Dangerous Gang" and the growth of the addictive methamphetamine drug in "World's Most Dangerous Drug" has now been recognized by her peers. The award-winning Explorer series has been selected as a finalist for the prestigious 2007 Beacon AwardsTM—an honor for excellence in public affairs throughout the cable industry.

Since joining National Geographic in December 2002 as the first woman host of Explorer, Ling has covered the looting of antiquities in war-torn Iraq, investigated the increasingly deadly drug war in Colombia, examined the complex issues surrounding China's one-child policy and journeyed more than 1,600 feet to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in a high-tech submersible in search of gold treasure. During Explorer's 2005 season, Ling explored the phenomenon of female suicide bombers in Chechnya and Israel's occupied territories and the hidden and dangerous culture inside American prisons.

In Explorer: "Inside North Korea," Ling gives viewers a rare glimpse of North Korea and its absolute dictator Kim Jong II, who is known as the "Dear Leader" by ruling the country as a god-king, controlling the world's fourth-largest army and creating international crises with his condemned nuclear program.

In addition to her work with National Geographic, Ling is a special correspondent to "The Oprah Winfrey Show," which builds on her sense of adventure, taking her from India to the Congo.

Prior to traveling the globe for National Geographic, Ling was known to millions of Americans as co-host of Barbara Walters' hit daytime talk show, "The View," where she shared no-holds-barred opinions on current events and everyday issues.

Ling has been working in television for more than 15 years. At age 16, the Northern California native hosted "Scratch," a nationally syndicated teen magazine show. Ling moved on to become one of the youngest reporters for Channel One News, a network seen in middle and high schools across the country.

By the age of 25, Ling was Channel One's senior war correspondent, visiting violent hot spots around the globe. In the field, she hunted down cocaine processing labs, reported on refugee crises and shared tea with the Dalai Lama. Altogether, Ling reported from more than two dozen countries, including Afghanistan, Iraq, Colombia, Algeria, Cambodia, Vietnam, China, Japan, India and Iran.

Her position as a role model for today's youth is one she embraces. In 2001, she hosted the television special Teen People's "20 Teens Who Will Change the World," and her incredible footage shot following the Taliban's takeover in Afghanistan helped provide insight for "The Day It All Changed," a teen forum she led for the WB Network.

Ling's hard work continues off-camera. She serves as a contributing editor for USA Weekend and has produced eight documentaries for PBS, several of which have won awards. In April 2001, she fulfilled her late Uncle John's dream by completing the Boston Marathon—with a time of 4:34—and raising money and awareness for pediatric cancer and the Ali & Dad's Army foundation.

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[旁观中国 China Viewfinder] 同主题链接:
中国的失踪儿童(Channel 4)(HBO)[China's Stolen Children]

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