- May 3, 2008 • 6:36 am PDT
- + responses
Tpappas in Hollywood
1
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
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Give Komen the Pink Slip: Five Ways to Support Women's Health for All
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Is Sweden's Classroom-Free School the Future of Learning?
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What Would a Post-SOPA Internet Look Like?
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A 375-Year-Old French Bank Forgives Debts of Paris' Poorest
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork

How much chicken, bok choy, or cabbage could someone living on the poverty line in China buy? Check out Stefen Chow's photographs.

What's it look like to live on the poverty line? In China, photographer Stefen Chow gives us a compelling portrait.

What has happened since China enacted the policy in 1979, and what are its implications for the future of the country?n

Guangzhou's kick-ass bus system helped it win the 2011 Sustainable Transport Award. No American city was even in the running.

In this issue we celebrate the people taking on the energy challenges of the 21st century.
We believe in the power of media, so it's hard when we see what a mess it has become.
Frozen drinks with little umbrellas have their place-usually involving a white-sand beach. But when inveterate wanderer Hans Christian...
It's easy to shake your head at the oft-repeated statistics about how many kids don't know what a verb is, or can't find the United States on...
What's on the table at Copenhagen? End Goal The long-term goals of preserving a habitable planet will effectively be boiled down to a...
We have seen the future, and it is happening at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Check out their amazing swimming center, which is see through. There...
On the outskirts of Shenzhen, up a small mountain and around a bend, is a Buddhist temple. At first glance, it looks like any other Buddhist...
They're just like us! They go to Vegas, win Olympic medals, and like hip hop. Plus: A China FAQ featuring the nine men who control China and more.
Earlier we spotlighted the amazing China photographs of Greg Girard. Fritz Hoffmann, Girard's partner in the photo agency Document China, also has...
In the current issue, the filmmaker Jia Zhang Ke writes about how China's rampant DVD piracy has created a class of street vendors operating...
There have been some thoughtful comments on our recent post about the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics. Here are a few follow-up...
The green issue epidemic sweeping the publishing world seems to have taken hold at Condé Nast. First Vanity Fair, and now Wired, both of which...
This illustration originally appeared as the Graphic Statement for GOOD Issue 018: The Slow Issue. You can see the full image here. You can...
What do cnn.com, google.com and good.is have in common?They're all banned in China. We've never felt so subversive.You can see which websites our...
The nine men who control China, China's ten largest companies, and more.
In honor of Earth Day, we'd like to point you to the Green Brothers, aka John Romankiewicz and Shane Zhao Xiangyu, enthusiastic young men in their...

