Calais migrant camp demolition raises child trafficking fears, U.N. says
President Francois Hollande said on Monday that France will completely shut down the migrant camp in Calais by year-end
"They will destroy my father's grave," says farmer who turned back the desert
"What I love most is the land, the soil. If we take good care of our earth we can obtain anything from it"
Global land rush enters "more dangerous stage", says anti-poverty group
About half of the signed land investment deals cover territory claimed by indigenous groups or local residents
Indian schoolgirl forced into domestic servitude escapes, says she was sold
Data shows more than 40 percent of human trafficking cases in India in 2015 involved children being bought, sold and exploited as modern day slaves
"Backward" indigenous peoples may hold solutions to world hunger - campaigners
Just three crops provide 60 percent of the world's calories: rice, wheat and maize
Villagers in southern India battle reservoir that will submerge their homes
In India's newest state, villagers say the government is using intimidation to take land for industrial projects
Crickets, birds, weather data combine to guide African farmers
A new weather advisory service, by an award-winning Kenyan tech expert, aims to help drought-hit farmers
FEATURE-A league of their own: Rohingya footballers tackle prejudice in Malaysia
"We can openly play football here. In Myanmar we are not even allowed to go out of our houses. I had to leave my country to save my life."
Philanthropy needs "significant evolution" in measuring impact
More strategy, better data, more transpareny - Robert Rosen, head of philanthropic partnership at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, shares his views on how philanthropic giving is evolving
FEATURE-In Denmark, au pairs risk abuse in name of "cultural exchange"
"He didn't rape me, but he kept saying he wanted to have physical relations with me and wanted to kiss me"