
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


How whistle-blowers implicated UN peacekeepers and international police in the forced prostitution and trafficking of Eastern European women into Bosnia in the late 1990s.
Plus, how Swiss psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross changed the way we think about death and dying when she developed her Five Stages of Grief; Beethoven's role in China's Cultural Revolution; the "friendship train" between India and Bangladesh; and the controversial teaching exercise which segregated children by whether they had blue or brown eyes.
Picture: the United Nations Peacekeeping Force patrols the Bosnian capital Sarajevo in March 1996 (Credit: Roger Lemoyne/Liaison/Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.3
558558 ratings
How whistle-blowers implicated UN peacekeepers and international police in the forced prostitution and trafficking of Eastern European women into Bosnia in the late 1990s.
Plus, how Swiss psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross changed the way we think about death and dying when she developed her Five Stages of Grief; Beethoven's role in China's Cultural Revolution; the "friendship train" between India and Bangladesh; and the controversial teaching exercise which segregated children by whether they had blue or brown eyes.
Picture: the United Nations Peacekeeping Force patrols the Bosnian capital Sarajevo in March 1996 (Credit: Roger Lemoyne/Liaison/Getty Images)

7,770 Listeners

373 Listeners

1,062 Listeners

5,530 Listeners

1,798 Listeners

3,216 Listeners

978 Listeners

1,878 Listeners

1,814 Listeners

1,084 Listeners

1,954 Listeners

586 Listeners

4,802 Listeners

964 Listeners

410 Listeners

736 Listeners

845 Listeners

364 Listeners

475 Listeners

2,740 Listeners

3,216 Listeners

3,361 Listeners

1,035 Listeners