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How have we become a childless world?
What forces have led nations — across cultures, economies, and political systems — along the same path toward near-global fertility decline?
This extended screening event explores the deeper patterns behind falling birthrates, drawing on additional scenes and newly expanded topics not included in the original Birthgap feature documentary.
Following the screening, join filmmaker and published demographer Stephen J. Shaw for a live reflection and audience Q&A. Throughout the event, attendees can optionally participate in live chat — sharing insights and submitting questions in real time as the film unfolds.
Experience one of our highly interactive Birthgap Chats events — where documentary, data, and discussion come together.
Includes Chapters 1–5 of the Birthgap documentary.
See the original feature film overview below - selected for the New York Chelsea Film Festival.
Birthgap (2025) is a feature-length documentary that follows data scientist and demographer Stephen J. Shaw on a nine-year investigation across 24 countries to answer a single question: why are birthrates falling across nearly every society on Earth?
From the outset, the film pursues a global explanation for a pattern that appears with striking consistency across countries, cultures, and income levels. The findings that unfold over the course of the film were subsequently peer reviewed and published in a Nature Portfolio journal in 2025.
The film examines why societies separated by geography, culture, and economic conditions appear to be converging on the same outcome: ultra-low fertility. Rather than attributing the trend to isolated national factors or individual circumstances, the investigation reveals a common underlying mechanism that challenges many prevailing assumptions about choice, biology, economics, and modern life.
More than 230 people are interviewed along the way, with many sharing deeply personal experiences – alongside contributions from economists, demographic researchers, and fertility doctors. Drawing on these conversations and data analysis, Birthgap follows the process of discovery itself, as evidence accumulates and a common global explanation comes into focus.
**Earlier work-in-progress documentaries from the original Birthgap Project — Birthgap :The Prequel and Birthgap: A Childless World were selected for the New York Chelsea Film Festival in 2020 and 2021. Birthgap (2025) represents the completed feature-length documentary, filmed across 24 countries, and brings together the full arc of the investigation into the causes and consequences of global birthrate decline. It reflects the culmination of nearly a decade of research, filming, and international discourse.
- Year2025
- Runtime118 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- PremiereSeptember 2025
- Subtitle LanguageEnglish
- Content WarningContains Emotional Scenes
- DirectorStephen J Shaw
- ProducerStephen J Shaw
- CinematographerElyse Mueller Cosgrove
- EditorJonathan Cipiti
- AnimatorChris Thorp
- ComposerNick Wood
- Sound DesignAlan Mawdsley
- MusicSyn Studios, Tokyo
How have we become a childless world?
What forces have led nations — across cultures, economies, and political systems — along the same path toward near-global fertility decline?
This extended screening event explores the deeper patterns behind falling birthrates, drawing on additional scenes and newly expanded topics not included in the original Birthgap feature documentary.
Following the screening, join filmmaker and published demographer Stephen J. Shaw for a live reflection and audience Q&A. Throughout the event, attendees can optionally participate in live chat — sharing insights and submitting questions in real time as the film unfolds.
Experience one of our highly interactive Birthgap Chats events — where documentary, data, and discussion come together.
Includes Chapters 1–5 of the Birthgap documentary.
See the original feature film overview below - selected for the New York Chelsea Film Festival.
Birthgap (2025) is a feature-length documentary that follows data scientist and demographer Stephen J. Shaw on a nine-year investigation across 24 countries to answer a single question: why are birthrates falling across nearly every society on Earth?
From the outset, the film pursues a global explanation for a pattern that appears with striking consistency across countries, cultures, and income levels. The findings that unfold over the course of the film were subsequently peer reviewed and published in a Nature Portfolio journal in 2025.
The film examines why societies separated by geography, culture, and economic conditions appear to be converging on the same outcome: ultra-low fertility. Rather than attributing the trend to isolated national factors or individual circumstances, the investigation reveals a common underlying mechanism that challenges many prevailing assumptions about choice, biology, economics, and modern life.
More than 230 people are interviewed along the way, with many sharing deeply personal experiences – alongside contributions from economists, demographic researchers, and fertility doctors. Drawing on these conversations and data analysis, Birthgap follows the process of discovery itself, as evidence accumulates and a common global explanation comes into focus.
**Earlier work-in-progress documentaries from the original Birthgap Project — Birthgap :The Prequel and Birthgap: A Childless World were selected for the New York Chelsea Film Festival in 2020 and 2021. Birthgap (2025) represents the completed feature-length documentary, filmed across 24 countries, and brings together the full arc of the investigation into the causes and consequences of global birthrate decline. It reflects the culmination of nearly a decade of research, filming, and international discourse.
- Year2025
- Runtime118 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- PremiereSeptember 2025
- Subtitle LanguageEnglish
- Content WarningContains Emotional Scenes
- DirectorStephen J Shaw
- ProducerStephen J Shaw
- CinematographerElyse Mueller Cosgrove
- EditorJonathan Cipiti
- AnimatorChris Thorp
- ComposerNick Wood
- Sound DesignAlan Mawdsley
- MusicSyn Studios, Tokyo