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Latest episodes from The Documentary Podcast: Archive 2007

Debt Threat

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2007 22:06


The first programme will show how rapidly the shock wave of the credit crunch is spreading and why it is now moving far beyond the sub-prime homeowners where it began.

Assignment - Blackwater

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2007 22:35


There are now as many private security contractors in Iraq as there are US soldiers. To whom are they accountable when things go wrong? Steve Evans reports on the most controversial contractor, Blackwater, which has been criticised by the Iraqi government, American politicians and its own employees.

Quest for a Cure

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2007 23:10


Peter Day reports on whether the US Food and Drug Administration will licence the HIV/AIDS drug Maraviroc.

Global Account - Part 4

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2007 22:31


Allan Urry investigates links between the Pentagon, politicians and weapons manufacturers.

Assignment - Inside Uzbekistan

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2007 22:46


Since the Uzbek government put down an uprising in Andijan in 2005, the country has become more and more isolated from the west. But ahead of the country's first Presidential election since 2000, our Central Asia correspondent Natalia Antelava made a secret trip across the state, recording her impressions.

Press for Freedom - part three

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2007 23:02


Building democracy: What is the role of radio in building democracy? In Papua, a new radio station is being installed as part of Indonesia's 68H network. 68H has introduced electricity by building a dam to power the station in the village. How did 68H get around censorship under Suharto? And why is radio such a key player in building civil society?

Press for Freedom - part two

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2007 23:01


Freedom of the internet:How do the motives of mainstream news websites compare with the agendas of blogs? In part two of 'Press for Freedom', we talk to Iraqi blogger Salam Pax and others who have delivered on-the-ground viewpoints in regions where the government would have otherwise silenced them. In Kuala Lumpur, we hear from the government-owned Bernama press, who also fund Nam News Network, supposedly the only unfiltered news wire in a non-aligned world.

Citizen Journalists

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2007 22:41


What is the future of news, when the internet may undermine the old-fashioned paternalistic precepts? BBC's Alan Little investigates.

Press For Freedom Part 1

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2007 22:58


BBC's Roy Greenslade looks at how far reporting 'the truth' can be endangered by governments, corporations and the new wave of internet publishing.

Making News Part 1

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2007 22:20


The BBC and other international broadcasters boast "objective" news and impartial window onto the world, but is such a thing really possible? Alan Little investigates.

Assignment - Leila's story

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2007 22:10


Leila is a young woman in Iran, sold into prostitution by her family at the age of 9, later forced into a temporary marriage, and then sentenced to hang at the age of 18. She was finally reprieved, but what does her story tell us about Iran's ability to legally protect its own children.

Global Account Part 2

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2007 22:59


Africa's Cocaine Coast - Guinea-Bissau is awash with cocaine and is ranked by the United Nations as the fifth poorest country in the world. Grant Ferrett investigates.

Seeing Iraq, Thinking Vietnam Part 2

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2007 22:14


Jonathan Marcus explores the impact of these two conflicts on the american political psyche.

Global Account - Part 1

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2007 22:57


Angus Stickler travels into the disputed "Red Zone" of Southern Thailand to discover the victims of a brutal and under-reported war.

Assignment - Inside Gaza

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2007 22:35


Six months ago, the radical Palestinian faction Hamas took total control of the Gaza Strip. Israel and Egypt responded by closing their borders with Gaza. Magdi Abdelhadi travelled to the Gaza Strip to see how the 1.5 million Palestinians living there are coping.

Seeing Iraq, Thinking Vietnam Part 1

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2007 22:45


Correspondent Jonathan Marcus compares the impact of the two conflicts on American society and politics.

Jihad and the Petrodollar part 2

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2007 22:59


Roger Hardy follows the money trail and looks at the case of two prominent Saudi charities.

Assignment - The internet chatroom murder

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2007 22:01


This week on Assignment, a story of lust, deception and betrayal on the internet. It tells the extraordinary story of a middle-aged factory worker who undergoes a virtual and very real transformation after he goes online - a transformation which ends in murder.

Taxing Questions (part four)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2007 23:00


The final part of a four part series in which Maurice Walsh discovers why globalisation and the black market have drastically undermined governments' ability to generate revenue in the form of tax.

Taxing Questions (part three)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2007 23:17


In the third of a four part series Maurice Walsh discovers why globalisation and the black market have drastically undermined governments' ability to generate revenue in the form of tax.

Can America Go Green? - Programme 3

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2007 23:01


The BBC's UN correspondent Laura Trevelyan explores how the US could retreat from its role as the planet's biggest polluter. In the final part of the series, Laura explores the degree to which Americans are speaking out and altering their lifestyles in the face of global warming.

Taxing Questions (programme two)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2007 20:08


In the second of a four part series Maurice Walsh discovers why globalisation and the black market have drastically undermined governments' ability to generate revenue in the form of tax. Maurice visits Zambia to examine what has happened to the money generated by the country's booming copper industry.

Jihad and the Petrodollar - part 1

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2007 22:52


Has Saudi Arabia fanned the flames of Muslim militancy by exporting its own puritanical form of Islam to every corner of the globe?

Assignment - The neglected thalidomiders

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2007 27:11


Fifty years ago, the drug thalidomide was introduced as a treatment for pregnancy sickness. The results for unborn children were devastating. Many of those affected have been compensated - but not thalidomiders in Spain. Geoff Adams-Spink investigates why.

Taxing Questions (programme one)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2007 22:37


The first part of a four part series in which Maurice Walsh discovers why globalisation and the black market have drastically undermined governments' ability to generate revenue in the form of tax.

Can America Go Green? - Programme 2

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2007 22:53


The BBC's UN correspondent Laura Trevelyan explores how the US could retreat from its role as the planet's biggest polluter. In this episode: Laura reports on General Electric. Once pilloried as a polluter (and taken to court for dumping waste in the Hudson River), the industry giant, under the leadership of Jeffrey Immelt, has gone green and sees its future prosperity tied to developing green technologies.

In Search of a New Kyoto

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2007 22:34


In a special BBC WS One Planet debate, we bring together four people at the heart of their governments' response to climate change – from the USA, Indonesia, Brazil and the UK.

Inside the Climate Change Talks (part 3)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2007 22:58


The final part in a three part series in which Mike Williams explores the complex web of negotiations to find a successor to the Kyoto Protocol which expires in 2012.

Inside the Climate Change Talks (part 2)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2007 22:30


The second part in a three part series in which Mike Williams explores the complex web of negotiations to find a successor to the Kyoto Protocol which expires in 2012.

Inside the Climate Change Talks (part 1)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2007 22:40


The first part in a three part series in which Mike Williams explores the complex web of negotiations to find a successor to the Kyoto Protocol which expires in 2012.

Can America Go Green? - Programme 1

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2007 22:58


The BBC's UN correspondent Laura Trevelyan explores how the US could retreat from its role as the planet's biggest polluter. In this episode: Laura finds out how the US could retreat from its role as the biggest polluter on the planet.

Assignment - Sexual violence in South Africa

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2007 22:36


South Africa has one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world. There are more than 54,000 reported rapes every year - and most rapes go unreported. David Goldblatt investigates what's behind this violence.

Wole Soyinka Returns to Biafra Part Two

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2007 22:44


In this part, Wole Soyinka travels back on a route he first took in 1967 at the beginning of the Biafran War, and speaks to two of the main protagonists.

Benazir Bhutto - The Investigation

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2007 21:33


In Pakistan President Musharraf and the former Pakistani prime minister, Benazir Bhutto did a deal this month. She told her suppprters to support his bid for the Presidency. He in return dropped corrpution charges bought by his government against her. This paved the way to her return to Pakistan after almost a decade of self-imposed exile. In "Benazir Bhutto - The Investigation", Owen Bennett-Jones looks at the claims against her and whether she could still face corruption charges.

Benazir Bhutto - The Investigation

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2007 21:47


We investigate the substance of the allegations against Benazir Bhutto and ask whether she could still face charges, despite the deal she has just struck with President Musharraf.

Wole Soyinka Returns to Biafra

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2007 22:14


Nigeria's Nobel Prize-winning author, Wole Sayinka travels back to Biafra and comes face to face with the military leader who imprisoned him 40 years ago.

Tales from the Commonwealth 4

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2007 23:10


In the final part of this series Robin White visits Georgetown the capital of Guyana where he experiences the transport system and learns about the demise of the Amerindian culture.

Tales from the Commonwealth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2007 22:26


Robin White visits Maputo the capital city of Mozambique. After sixteen years of civil war how well is the city functioning?

Tales from the Commonwealth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2007 22:20


Robin White finds out about the disappearing Kweyol culture in St Lucia. Why is it too difficult to make Kweyol the island's official language?

China's Long Arm 4

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2007 22:50


China has turned its attention to the US in its search for natural resources, even enabling the re-opening of an abandoned iron mine in Minnesota.

China's Long Arm 3

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2007 22:55


Lucy Ash assesses the wider impact of China's insatiable appetite for natural resources, and focuses on the special relation with Angola and its oil.

China's Long Arm 2

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2007 22:38


Maurice Walsh considers whether China might use its growing military power to reclaim Taiwan, possibly provoking a confrontation with the US.

China's Long Arm 1

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2007 22:43


Maurice Walsh examines whether US government concerns about rising defence spending in China will fuel a new arms race in the Pacific.

Tales from the Commonwealth 1

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2007 22:19


Local broadcaster Eunis Taumomoa guides us through Papua New Guinea, a country that has more than 700 different languages and ethnic groups.

Assignment - Afghanistan's war crimes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2007 22:27


Afghanistan's recent history has been a long list of human rights abuses and war crimes - yet many of those accused are now beyond the reach of prosecutors because of an amnesty the warlords themselves voted in. What impact is this having on the survivors?

Stem Cell Bazaar - Part 2

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2007 22:25


Meet the doctors who are trying to introduce regulation of stem cell therapies in India, so that those vulnerable patients who can least afford to spend money on unproven therapies can have genuine grounds for hope.

The Land of the Mobile Millionaires

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2007 22:41


Matthew Sweet presents the extraordinary story of Finland's Nokia Millionaires, and how the mobile phone industry prevented a severe recession in the country.

Life After Vietnam

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2007 22:33


Lance Corporal Baronowski's personal recordings, made in Vietnam shortly before he was killed in 1966, paint a vivid picture of the young soldier's life. How do his experiences compare with soldiers in today's conflicts?

Assignment - Britain's gangmasters

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2007 22:45


Assignment reports on the fate of thousands of migrants from eastern Europe, who come to Britain to find work. Even though they are in the UK legally, they're often exploited by gangmasters who ignore employment laws, and sometimes don't even pay their employees.

Stem Cell Bazaar - Part 1

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2007 22:34


Do stem cells really offer a miracle cure? Are the clinics offering genuine treatments at the cutting edge of science, or merely taking advantage of the vulnerable?

Assignment - Burma: the road to crisis

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2007 22:54


The two week uprising in Burma has been ruthlessly put down by the Burmese military. The protests appear to be over. What lay behind the uprising, and why is the Burmese junta so resistant to pressure to reform?

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