There's a shortage of women in the Faroe Islands. Dateline looks at how internet dating has boosted the population and brought multiculturalism to this remote community.
Can one Australian woman make a difference in South Sudan's brutal civil war? We meet the frontline aid worker who 'thinks like a General', in order to save lives.
Women were banned from 450 jobs in Ukraine, but now the police force is leading the way on gender reform. They're recruiting frontline female officers in a bid to change their brutal and bloody reputation.
Every year hundreds of thousands of tourists travel to the white sand and aqua blue water of Cancún - but with increasing gang violence scaring locals and tourists alike, will people stop going?
Only one person had a chance at winning the Russian election so why did a former reality TV star challenge Vladimir Putin? Was she a Kremlin plant? We follow Ksenia Sobchak on the campaign trail.
Millennials across America are rising up against President Trump and taking over city hall. Can two millennial mayors beat old politics to save their struggling cities or will youth let them down?
The Vietnam War ended more than 40 years ago, but for many locals the effects of the conflict are felt every day. We examine how the use of Agent Orange by American forces continues to impact Vietnamese children.
Thousands of African women are trafficked to Italy and forced into sex work. How does a former sex slave who married one of her clients now rescue women from the clutches of human trafficking gangs?
Chinese New Year isn't just a holiday - it's the largest annual human migration on Earth. We follow two workers as they travel across the country to their home town, the only time all year they'll see their children.
This year, Cape Town has been on the verge of becoming the first major city to run out of water. Incredibly, they've managed to more than halve the amount of water they use - but will it be enough to save their city?
What happens when three Yemeni kids under constant bombing attacks, are asked to report on the warzone they're living in? An intimate and horrifying portrait of a community struggling to cope with the violence around them.
As the world competes to explore the resource rich depths of the ocean, we're given rare access to a team of Chinese scientists and four trailblazing women as they go on a perilous mission deep underwater.
A special investigation into the mass exodus of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar. We examine evidence that Myanmar's security forces used systematic rape and terror tactics to expel hundreds of thousands of Rohingya from the country.
In Ireland women can go to jail for getting an abortion, even in cases of rape. As the country votes on whether to change its conservative abortion laws, we take the pulse of a nation divided down the middle.
What's behind the rise of extreme vegan activists? This week we meet a third-generation dairy farmer who's been called a rapist and a murderer and the Australian vegan activist kicking up a storm in the UK.
Chinese copy artist Zhao Xiaoyong has sold more than 90,000 Van Gogh reproductions. We follow him to the Netherlands see the real works of an artist who's consumed his life for decades.
An estimated 100,000 children in the Philippines are involved in prostitution. We go undercover with a Queensland dad who's working with local police to track down the underground pimps of this criminal world.
All eyes are on the men's football World Cup, but what about women who play the game? This week we go to three continents, and hear firsthand stories of their passion and struggle for the beautiful game.
Meet the Proud Boys - a group that says it speaks for a new minority: the disenfranchised young male. The group is a neo-fascist men-only organization that believes Western culture, especially white men, are under threat.
The Viking nation of Iceland has become a feminist utopia. We look at how the island country became the best place on earth to be a woman, and as if that also means it's the best place to be a man.
Is Trump's 'zero-tolerance' immigration policy violating human rights? In the days following Trump's U-turn, Dateline follows one family's fight to get their 7-year-old son back, after he was taken away at the border.
Dateline travels to Kenya to meet an intersex preacher making ripples among a conservative Christian population. How has he overcome the stigma surrounding his sex to give voice to the 'third gender'?
All aboard the Lifeline Express - the hospital train using India's railway network to deliver medical care and life changing operations to the country's most vulnerable.
How do guerrilla fighters integrate back into society after putting down their guns? Colombia's FARC rebels are attempting to make their hills a tourist haven and use a YouTube channel to tell their stories.
What happens when the peacekeepers meant to protect people, become the most feared? This week Dateline follows the trail of sex abuse left behind by UN peacekeepers, and hears from their victims.
New Zealand's Maori are famed the world over for their warrior culture. But in a country with the highest teen suicide rate in the developed world, why are Maori boys barely holding on?
Do dogs belong on the dinner plate? South Korea is in the middle of a war over a cultural practice as the younger generation defends canines in a battle against customs and tradition.
Last year 138 prison inmates were killed in Brazil's famed overcrowded and violent system. But could those on the inside be trusted to keep law and order if they were handed the keys?
Krishnan Guru-Murthy travels to the Dominican Republic, the country famed for its pristine beaches and year-round sunshine - but where the UN has identified terrible crimes being committed against teenagers at the hands of sex tourists.
Melbourne's Greek community leapt to action when wildfires killed 99 people in the Greek seaside town of Mati. This program follows their search for answers and their quest to help the fire ravaged town.
In the lead up to the first midterm election of Donald Trump's Presidency, Dateline visited the swing state of Iowa to capture the pulse of middle America in a divided political climate.
It's believed 5 million children in India have genius IQs, but are never discovered. We follow two children from the slums who are as smart as Neil Armstrong and are fighting to achieve their dreams.
Dateline gets rare access inside the conservative kingdom of Saudi Arabia to explore its controversial social reforms. Through the eyes of a female comedian, and a sportswoman reporter Calliste Weitenberg asks if the reforms go far enough?