All in The Reporter (報導者)
Chen Mei-hua says Taiwan's 2018 referendum questions on same-sex marriage and gender equity were unconstitutional.
Chen Si-hao says the Christian church strangled the same-sex marriage debate in Taiwan. Do LGBTQ groups have any hope of clawing back the discussion space?
The Tsou people of Alishan talk about their families’ suffering during the 228 Massacre and White Terror period.
The families of 228 Massacre victims in Chiayi recount the losing battle of the local militias and the senseless violence that came afterwards.
Victims’ families in Keelung and Badu recount the horrors they witnessed during the 228 massacre.
Seven decades after the 228 Massacre, survivors and relatives in Taipei City and Taipei County recount their experience and anguish.
A year and a half before the 228 Massacre, the Chinese Nationalists were busy robbing Taiwan in broad daylight.
The graves of White Terror victims at Liuzhangli were forgotten for decades. Now, preserving the site has become surprisingly controversial.
For migrant labourers in Shenzhen, living in an “urban village” is the only affordable option. But now even that is under threat.
Uyghur vendors were once a staple of cities all across China, now they’ve all but disappeared, says writer Fan Zhijie.
In this special discussion, five authors talk about the impact of “On Happiness Road” and its ability to transport viewers to another era.
Kaohsiung was supposed to be a DPP stronghold. So why did Kaohsiung residents plunk for the KMT’s Han Kuo-yu in this year’s election?
Made up of five migrant workers from Indonesia, boy band “The Mandalas” is using music to bridge the gap between local Taiwanese and the country’s growing South-east Asian community.
Macau’s greyhounds face an uncertain future as the city’s only legal dog-racing course shuts down.
Sixty-five years ago, these Korean War POWs were determined to be repatriated to the Republic of China on Taiwan. The price was a tattoo that proved their loyalty.
With the upcoming marriage equality referendum on everyone’s mind, Pride Parade-goers were asked to “vote for the rainbow”.
The Concentric Patriotism Alliance has evolved from an anti-communist organization to become Taiwan’s most zealous supporter of unification.
Forty years after the Zhongli Incident, former DPP chairman Hsu Hsin-liang revisits Taiwan's first step towards democracy.
The award-winning director of the “The Great Buddha+” gives his thoughts on religion, filmmaking, and making a life plan.
Director Huang Hui-chen discusses her new documentary, an auto-biographical film about her relationship with her lesbian mother.