Throughout the week BBC World Service offers a wide range of documentaries and other factual programmes. This podcast offers you the chance to access landmark series from our archive.
MI6 - A Century in the Shadows (Part Three)
In the final part of this series, Sir John Scarlett, the former head of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service talks about the interrogation of terrorist suspects and MI6's role in the run up to the war in Iraq.
12/31/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
Assignment - Reporting Mindanao
The Philippines is one of the most dangerous places in the world to report from. More than thirty journalists were killed there in a single incident at the end of 2009. Kate McGeowan travels to the troubled southern island of Mindanao to meet one of the reporters whose job it is to cover the daily violence there.
12/30/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
The Foods that Make Billions - Part Three
How have advertisers and brand specialists convinced us to buy a commodity that is sold for a great deal more than it costs to produce? Louise Hidalgo looks at the exponential growth - and the cost - of the yoghurt industry.
12/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 6 seconds
Brazil: Lula's Legacy - Part One
In this two-part series, the BBC’s Paulo Cabral travels to the two places that marked Lula’s life – the poor region in the northeast where the president was born, and the industrial suburb of Sao Paulo where he made his reputation. What has been the legacy of one of the most popular politicians in Brazilian history?
12/27/2010 • 23 minutes, 19 seconds
MI6 - A Century in the Shadows (Part Two)
The second part in this series describes what went on behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War. Former MI6 Chief John Scarlett describes his clandestine meeting with an agent and the Russian defector Oleg Gordievsky talks about his reasons for coming over to the other side.
12/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
Assignment - Mexico's Toughest Cop
For Assignment Rob Walker travels to the city of Tijuana on Mexico's border with the United States on the trail of one of Mexico's most controversial law enforcement officers.
12/23/2010 • 22 minutes, 59 seconds
The Foods that Make Billions - Part Two
How have advertisers and brand specialists convinced us to buy a commodity that is sold for a great deal more than it costs to produce? Louise Hidalgo looks at the exponential growth - and the cost - of the breakfast cereal industry.
12/22/2010 • 23 minutes, 2 seconds
Power and the Judges - Part Two
Many Turks have lost faith in their judges, who are seen as out of touch and too close to Ataturk's secular and military state. What will determine this struggle for power between the government and judges?
12/20/2010 • 23 minutes, 26 seconds
MI6 - A Century in the Shadows
Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, marks its centenary this year and BBC security correspondent Gordon Corera talks to senior intelligence figures as well as their former arch enemies about the shadowy world of espionage.
12/17/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
The Foods that Make Billions
How have advertisers and brand specialists convinced us to buy a commodity that is sold for a great deal more than it costs to produce? Louise Hidalgo looks at the exponential growth - and the costs - of the bottled water industry.
12/15/2010 • 23 minutes, 20 seconds
Power and the Judges - Part One
Why are judges so important in today's world and how do the courts earn and use their power? In part one Laura Lynch hears from judges operating in Russia and Colombia – what does it take for judges to stand up to pressure?
12/13/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Extremes of Corruption: Somalia - Part Two
Does Somalia deserve its bad reputation for corruption? In the second of a two-part series, Pascale Harter asks if, after nearly two decades of civil war, is it even fair to talk about corruption in Somalia? Or has it now begun to drive the conflict?
12/10/2010 • 23 minutes, 23 seconds
Extremes of Corruption: Sweden - Part One
Does Sweden live up to its squeaky clean image? In the first of a two-part series looking at perceptions of state corruption, Pascale Harter investigates whether Sweden - consistently ranked among the least corrupt countries in the world - is quite as it seems.
12/9/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
Oiling the Machine - Corruption in Chicago
"We like our crooks, our fast Eddies, and we find them entertaining." Steve Edwards takes to the mean streets of his hometown Chicago - asking why the Windy City is such a hotbed of corruption.
12/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Manny Pacquiao - Part Two
In this exclusive two-part documentary, Mike Costello travels to the Philippines to meet boxing legend, record-breaking eight times world champion, politician and national hero, Manny Pacquiao.
12/3/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Assignment - Europe's Missing Millions
For Assignment Angus Stickler tracks how money has gone astray across the 27 member states of the European Union and asks why funding continues in regions with proven records of mismanagement and fraud.
12/2/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
Would You Kill the Big Guy: Part One
You're standing on a footbridge next to a very big man. The only way you can stop an out-of-control train is to push him over the footbridge onto the track. His bulk will stop the train and save lives. Will you push him? Stephen Evans explores this moral dilemma to discover what sort of ethical creatures humans are.
11/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 11 seconds
Manny Pacquiao - Part One
In this exclusive two-part documentary, Mike Costello travels to the Philippines to meet boxing legend, record-breaking eight times world champion, politician and national hero, Manny Pacquiao.
11/26/2010 • 23 minutes, 20 seconds
Assignment: Anger in Punjab Province
More than six million people in Pakistan now face the start of winter without adequate shelter because their homes were destroyed in the devastating floods in August. Jill McGivering, who reported on the floods at the time, returns to one of the worst hit areas to investigate claims that corruption played a major part in the flood damage itself.
11/25/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
Marching into History - Part Two
"Lucky them, they didn't have to fight the battles we fought." Michael Goldfarb traces the history of protest through the footsteps of those who have campaigned for and celebrated the rights of the gay community in Britain and across the globe.
11/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 26 seconds
Road Kill - Part Two - Costa Rica
"There are no words to describe when you lose your child, especially one who was full of life a talented girl that liked dancing." Sheena McDonald travels to Costa Rica to find out if new legislation to tackle drink-driving is working and reducing the number of road deaths.
11/22/2010 • 23 minutes, 32 seconds
The Impossible Life of Jacques Costeau
Pioneering French marine explorer Jacques Cousteau brought marine life to cinema and television screens for the first time. Bridget Nicholls speaks to Costeau's friends, family and colleagues as they look back on the life of this difficult but inspiring man in the centennial of his birth.
11/19/2010 • 22 minutes, 56 seconds
Assignment: Trouble in Dagestan
Almost every day in the Russian republic of Dagestan there are reports of Islamist insurgents assassinating police officers and local officials. And there are regular clashes between extremists and the security forces across the republic. It's causing Moscow deep concern and they blame 'outside forces' for orchestrating the violence; but human rights groups say it's a combination of poverty and police brutality which is fuelling the insurgency. For Assignment Steve Rosenberg reports from Dagestan.
11/18/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
Marching into History - Part One
"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character." Michael Goldfarb traces the history of the march through the footsteps of Martin Luther King, Mahatma Gandhi and Mao Zedong.
11/17/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
Road Kill - Part One - Kenya
"It's a woman with a tiny baby and luggage on the back of a motorbike with no helmet." Sheena McDonald travels to Kenya to find out what the government is doing to improve on road safety and reduce the number of traffic accidents.
11/15/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
The Great Palace of Verse
Completed by the poet Ferdowsi in 1010 AD, the Shahnameh is widely regarded as a masterpiece of world literature. It is of central importance to Iranian culture and self-identity and has inspired some of the world's most exquisite manuscripts. Narguess Farzad dives into the text to explore the stories and themes contained within and to revel in the language.
11/12/2010 • 23 minutes, 39 seconds
Assignment: Congo's Blood Gold
For Assignment Thomas Fessy investigates allegations that a senior Congolese general profited from the illegal takeover of a gold mine.
11/11/2010 • 22 minutes, 59 seconds
Baghdad Boy - Part Two
Ali Abbas became an icon of the Iraq War when images of him with his arms amputated were beamed around the world. Seven years after an American rocket attack destroyed his home and killed 16 members of his family, Ali returns to Baghdad. Will he give in to the pressure of getting married?
11/10/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Return to White Horse - Part Two
"With the city being built here on our doorstep, I can look after the children and earn some money." Carrie Gracie returns to China to see how locals are embracing and benefiting from city life.
11/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 23 seconds
The Battle of King Salmon - Part Two
“If you say bye bye to that fountain of life you may as well say bye bye to my heritage.” How will a proposed copper mine affect Alaska’s main industry of salmon? The BBC’s Nick Rankin reports on the development opportunities – as well as environmental and social concerns – of this controversial proposal.
11/5/2010 • 23 minutes, 29 seconds
Assignment - Burma Votes
The people of Burma go to the polls on November 7th for the first time in 20 years. In 1990, an overwhelming majority voted for pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, and her National League for Democracy. The Generals running the country ignored the result and have imposed strict military rule ever since. So, why are they holding elections now and do ordinary people care about them? Sue Lloyd Roberts travels across Burma to investigate.
11/4/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
Baghdad Boy - Part One
Seven years after an American rocket attack destroyed his home, killed 16 members of his family, and left him without arms, Ali Abbas returns to Baghdad. Now 19 years old and with loved ones looking to arrange a marriage it’s time to become an adult but, with his childhood stolen, adapting is a struggle and the future uncertain. In part one, the BBC's Hugh Sykes joins Ali just before he leaves for Baghdad.
11/3/2010 • 23 minutes, 31 seconds
Return to White Horse - Part One
"We took the decision to build a new city ten years ago. We had four objectives: civilised, hygienic and scenic - with a focus on eco-tourism." Carrie Gracie returns to China to see how 21st Century urbanisation is progressing.
11/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 22 seconds
The Battle of King Salmon
Nick Rankin reports from Alaska during the greatest wild salmon run in the world and joins commercial and subsistence fishermen who live off this natural resource.
10/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 20 seconds
Assignment: Irish Anger
As Ireland faces up to one of Europe's most punishing financial crises, Ed Butler looks at the growing anger amongst its citizens.
10/28/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
The Other Guantanamo
Travel writer Polly Evans goes to Guantanamo, Cuba, and talks to local people about the town where they live. How do they feel about it becoming synonymous with the prison camp that Amnesty International calls "the gulag of our times"?
10/27/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Assignment - Drugs and Power in Kyrgyzstan
The BBC's Central Asia correspondent, Rayhan Demytrie, explores the relationship between drugs and politics in Kyrgyzstan.
10/21/2010 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
Great Expectations Part 4
Organisers of the 2012 Olympic Games argue that its legacy will be felt for generations to come. With the prospects for jobs, will regeneration affect those who need it most?
10/20/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
Great Expectations Part 3
It is two years to go until the London 2012 Olympic Games and the residents of a council estate nearby have been watching the venues take shape for a while now. One of the pledges when London won the 2012 bid to host the Olympics was that the East End - the socially deprived area of the city - would be lifted out of its poverty. Is the regeneration of the area affecting those it was supposed to target?
10/13/2010 • 23 minutes, 31 seconds
Mysteries of the Brain - Part Four
"I find it difficult to recognize famous people because they have very symmetrical faces. I only know Madonna by her eyeliner." How do our brains work in everyday life? In the last of a four-part series examining the mind’s complexities, Professor Barry Smith examines the link between the brain, memory and consciousness.
10/11/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
The City That Sacked Its Staff
In the midst of a financial crisis, Maywood, a small city near Los Angeles, took the radical step of firing all city employees. Policing in Maywood is now handled by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and many of the other city's services in operation are being handled by the nearby city of Bell. Mayor Ana Rizo claimed that it was either this or declaring bankruptcy. Simon Pitts discovers what went wrong in Maywood and explores why this decision was taken, and whether Maywood might be a model for other city governments facing financial hardship.
10/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Why Europe's Roma stay poor
It’s halfway through the European ‘Decade of Roma inclusion’ but millions of euros in EU funding have failed to make a dent in Roma exclusion. Nick Thorpe travels to Romania, home to an estimated 2 million Roma – 10 % of the population - to find out why.
10/7/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Memory Wars - Silent No More
Can oral history challenge or alter the official past of a nation? History is often said to be written by the victors, but oral history has been strongly associated with the voices of the 'ordinary' citizens. Be it war, revolution or dictatorship, these accounts often offer different versions of the past. Alan Dein explores how this oral history can sometime collide with the official version committed to the history books - particularly in nations where the outcome is still bitterly contested.
10/6/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
Mysteries of the Brain - Part Three
"I have to choose between the fruit salad and the cream cake. Rationally, I know what I should do. I should choose the fruit salad. But will I?" How do our brains work in everyday life? In the third of a four-part series examining the mind’s complexities, Professor Barry Smith looks at how the brain makes decisions.
10/4/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
The Empire's Last Officers
As a 23-year-old, young British colonial officer John Smith was put in charge of the vast area of Kano in Nigeria. In his position, he represented the might of the British Empire. Now 82, Smith returns to see how the country has fared after 50 years of freedom and to renew a remarkable friendship.
10/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Assignment: Black and Single
There's a tough marriage market in the US for single, college educated, black women. For Assignment Nina Robinson travels to New York to find out why.
9/30/2010 • 23 minutes, 23 seconds
Memory Wars - The Ghosts of Europe
Can oral history challenge or alter the official past of a nation? History is often said to be written by the victors, but oral history has been strongly associated with the voices of the 'ordinary' citizens. Be it war, revolution or dictatorship, these accounts often offer different versions of the past. Alan Dein explores how this oral history can sometime collide with the official version committed to the history books - particularly in nations where the outcome is still bitterly contested.
9/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 23 seconds
Mysteries of the Brain - Part Two
“When I wake up in the morning I think I’ve still got two normal arms and I have to look to see which one is not there.” How do our brains work in everyday life? In the second of a four-part series examining the mind’s complexities, Professor Barry Smith explores the link between the body and the brain.
9/27/2010 • 22 minutes, 34 seconds
The Magic Carpet Flight Manual
Writer Cathy FitzGerald explores the past, present, and very real future of the magic carpet and wonders what our desire to defy gravity tells us about ourselves. We dream of flying and often long to fly unaided - is that part of it?
9/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 11 seconds
Assignment - American and Muslim
With anti-Islamic sentiment on the rise in America, Claire Bolderson reports for Assignment on what it is like to be a young American muslim in America and explores what is being done to stop them becoming alienated.
9/23/2010 • 23 minutes, 15 seconds
World Stories: Revolutions in Iran
How does the spread of ideas impact individual lives, shape millions of minds, fuel revolutions and alter world opinion? Afshin Dehkordi is on a quest to find out in the context of both Iran's recent media revolution and the overthrow of the Shah in 1979.
9/22/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
Mysteries of the Brain - Part One
"Why do we like and dislike certain foods? The most important thing in the tasting process is not the tongue, nose or ears – it’s the brain." Barry Smith explores how the brain makes us capable of language, thinking and feeling.
9/20/2010 • 23 minutes, 11 seconds
Seeking the Endgame - Part Two
Chess fanatic Simon Terrington goes on a wide ranging journey and asks the question, why does chess still have a place in the 21st century.
9/17/2010 • 21 minutes, 31 seconds
Assignment - Senegal's Schoolboy Beggars
Angus Crawford reports from Senegal for Assignment on what the government there is doing to protect thousands of schoolboys whose teachers send them out to beg on the streets every day.
9/16/2010 • 23 minutes, 12 seconds
World Stories: The Children of Pedro Pan
During operation Pedro Pan, 14,000 children were sent from Cuba by the parents for what was supposed to be a better life in the US. For some it was an adventure, for a great many others life away from home was hard. Many never returned.
9/15/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
Zainab's Story
"She walked in like a commander of the armed forces - despite the fact they had guns - she told them it was time for peace". Meet Sierra Leone's foreign minister Zainab Bangura, a remarkable woman who is trying to make poverty history in her nation.
9/13/2010 • 23 minutes, 22 seconds
Seeking the Endgame - Part One
Self-confessed chess fanatic Simon Terrington assesses how computer technology has affected chess at the highest level and what this means for its future. He looks at the moment when chess champion Garry Kasparov was beaten by the IBM computer Deep Blue and hears from experts about the impact that event had across the game.
9/10/2010 • 22 minutes, 13 seconds
Assignment - Commonwealth Games
There are frantic preparations underway in India's capital city, Delhi, for the Commonwealth Games which start next month. But as Rupa Jha reports for Assignment, the work is bringing out both the best and the worst of the city.
9/9/2010 • 23 minutes, 8 seconds
World Stories: Afghanistan's Dancing Boys
In Afghanistan women are not allowed to dance in public, but boys can be made to dance in women's clothing - and they are often sexually abused. In part three of the World Stories series, Rustam Qobil reports on this ancient but controversial tradition. Listeners may find this documentary upsetting.
9/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
The Legal World - Part Two
Incompetence and corruption in Uganda's justice system is leading to countless numbers of prisoners being left to rot, and even die in Ugandan jails before their cases come to court. Meet the lawyers trying to get justice and freedom, amidst the chaos in Uganda.
9/6/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
The Battle for Hearts and Lungs - Part Two
Sue Armstrong looks at the Malawi's growing dependence on tobacco growing. She also asks whether cigarette manufacturers are trying to take advantage of poor regulation to build up new markets in Africa and elsewhere in the developing world, as smoking has declined in developed countries.
9/3/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Assignment - Happy Birthday Mr President
President Yahya Jammeh of Gambia is one of West Africa's longest serving leaders. He's maintained a firm grip on power since taking over in a military coup in 1994. He professes to have invented a cure for Aids and has declared himself a hero of agriculture and development. He's also a man who likes to celebrate his birthday in style. Ed Butler was in Gambia for the party.
9/2/2010 • 22 minutes, 52 seconds
A Widow's Journey
In 1989, Appapillai Amirthalingam - the most prominent political figure of the Tamil community - was assassinated at his home in the Sri Lankan capital, Colombo. Twenty years on, the Tamil Tigers have been defeated by the military. Appapillai's wife and son travel back to their homeland in search of his legacy in an attempt to understand what the future holds for Sri Lanka's Tamil people.
9/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
The Legal World - Part One
It is claimed that thousands of people of Haitian descent are suffering systematic discrimination by authorities in the Dominican Republic. Brian King meets the local lawyers who are fighting individual cases of injustice.
8/31/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
The Battle for Hearts and Lungs - Part One
Sue Armstrong investigates the growing pressure on developing countries as tobacco companies battle for new smokers. Poorer tobacco growing countries like Malawi are becoming ever more dependent on tobacco as a regular income. But how do they resolve the dilemma between health and wealth?
8/27/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Assignment - Cutting the Lifeline in Honduras
Money sent home by migrant workers provides a lifeline for millions of the world's poorest people. In this Assignment programme we hear from Honduran migrant workers in the US and from their impoverished families back home. Vera Frankl presents.
8/26/2010 • 23 minutes, 7 seconds
World Stories: The Rollercoaster of Life in Kabul
"Why doesn't grandad smile?" Meena Baktash takes a personal look at the Kabul of her youth. What has war done to a city that was once so beautiful and a people so vibrant? After decades of conflict, what is left aside from a feeling of nostalgia?
8/25/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
The Brotherhood - Part two
Despite an official ban and regular crack downs the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has gone from strength to strength. The the BBC's Arabic affairs analyst Magdi Abdelhadi investigates the secret of its endurance and its global reach.
8/23/2010 • 23 minutes, 15 seconds
The Wireless World of Gerry Wells
Guru, boffin, eccentric and genius, Gerry Wells is obsessed with radio - tinkering with, building and repairing them. It is a fixation that has got him into trouble with the law, but ultimately radio has been his saviour.
8/20/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
Assignment - On the Run in Sweden
Sweden has garnered respect around the world for the welcome it offered to thousands of Iraqi refugees after the invasion of 2003. It's taken more Iraqis than any other country in Europe - indeed one small town outside Stockholm, Södertälje, has taken more than the United States. But 3,000 of those refugees are now living in hiding. Their applications for permanent residency have been denied and they face deportation if they are arrested. Tim Mansel reports from Sweden on why the government has decided it's safe to send these people home.
8/19/2010 • 23 minutes, 15 seconds
The Brotherhood - Part one
"No taxi driver in Cairo knows how to find the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood. The brothers may be everywhere but the organisation is nowhere to be seen." The BBC's Magdi Abdelhadi investigates Egypt's oldest Islamist organisation.
8/16/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
The Muslim Superstar
Singer Sami Yusuf is one of the biggest superstars in the Muslim world. He's eyeing up success in the mainstream market, but how can he compete in an industry that makes its profit from outrageous stars like Lady Gaga?
8/13/2010 • 20 minutes, 34 seconds
Assignment - Proud to be Georgian
How do you train someone to love their country? Two years ago Russia and Georgia fought a brief war over the little known territory of South Ossetia. Russia sent its tanks deep into Georgian territory. In Georgia, the war led to an outbreak of patriotic fervour. In this week’s Assignment, Tom Esslemont has been to visit a government-run “patriotic” summer camp - where young Georgians learn to develop a sense of national pride.
8/12/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Useful Idiots - Part Two
In this two part series, the BBC takes a look at the intellectuals - or Lenin's ‘useful idiots’ - who have praised tyrants, and rewritten history. How was it that so many supposedly intelligent people were manipulated by dictators over the 20th Century into saying good things about bad regimes?
8/11/2010 • 22 minutes, 51 seconds
The Mossad
"They teach you how to steal and they teach you how to kill and they teach you to do things which normal people don't do." Security Correspondent Gordon Corera reveals the story behind Israel's secret service.
8/9/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
Korea's lost children
Korea's overseas adoption programme began in the 1950s as the impoverished government's answer to the masses of mixed-race orphans from the Korean war. All told, around 200,000 Korean children have been adopted overseas over the past 60 years.
About 300 of them have since returned to live in Korea and many are now involved in trying to change the adoption laws.
In this programme, the BBC's Ellen Otzen meets Jane Trenka and Suki Leith, both of whom were adopted by American families, to explore the impact foreign adoption has had on them.
8/6/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
Assignment - Politics in Rwanda
Days before Rwanda's presidential election, the government has issued a strongly worded statement denying any involvement in the killing of political opponents. Rob Walker has been investigating the allegations for Assignment.
8/5/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
Useful Idiots
“That’s what my role was. I was taken around and shown things as a useful idiot.”
– Doris Lessing
In this two part series, the BBC takes a look at the intellectuals - or Lenin's ‘useful idiots’ - who have praised tyrants, and rewritten history. How was it that so many supposedly intelligent people were manipulated by dictators over the 20th Century into saying good things about bad regimes?
8/4/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Shaking the World - Part Four
"This culture inhibits the evolution of new ideas," says Professor Guosong Liu of the deferntial culture of China. Will this deferential culture keep China behind the West in the race to create the next big thing?
Michael Robinson looks at whether the political model which has delivered China's fantastic economic growth over the last 30 years is the same model that will deliver growth over the next 30 years.
8/2/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
Spanning the World - Part Four
London Bridge has served as a crossing, a shopping district, a housing settlement and a platform for the grotesque display of criminal's heads. It crosses the river Thames. How did it end up in Arizona?
7/30/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Assignment - Jamaica's Sprint Factory
Jamaica has a reputation for producing world class athletes. Athletes are nurtured from a young age: boys and girls as young as six enter competitions and train intensively throughout their school years to compete in fiercely contested national athletics championships. Most of these children come from poor socio-economic backgrounds and their knowledge of the risks of drug taking - whether for medicinal or performance enhancement - is limited. There's a debate now in Jamaica about how early young children should be introduced to the world of anti-doping and even whether it's time to start testing children as young as ten years old. Nina Robinson reports for Assignment.
7/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 17 seconds
Listening Post - Part Two
The Listening Post is a new series that invites close, unhurried listening to the stories of individuals and the histories they carry with them. In Part Two listen to the touching story of Belfast-born Philip McTaggart, a man who lives in the shadow of his son's suicide.
7/28/2010 • 23 minutes, 29 seconds
Shaking the World - Part Three
China's social tensions may threaten the growth upon which much of the rest of the world now relies.
There have been protests over wages and working conditions in factories of China's east coast but as Michael Robinson finds out, there are long-simmering problems as well.
7/26/2010 • 23 minutes, 14 seconds
Spanning the World - Part Three
What personal stories can a bridge reveal? When the he Oresund Bridge-Tunnel opened between Denmark and Sweden, it forged a connection between two countries with a difficult past. How can Swedes from Scania and Danes from Zealand attempt to forge a new unified identity?
7/23/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Assignment - Who Jails the Pirates?
Why are so few captured pirates brought to trial? Each year hundreds of ships are attacked by pirate gangs, many off the coast of Somalia. An international Combined Task Force now patrols the region and its ships regularly witness boarding raids and seize pirates, yet most are just released or returned to the Somali shore - probably to participate in further attacks. For Assignment, Simon Cox investigates the highly-charged political, social and legal issues which enable pirates to operate with relative impunity.
7/22/2010 • 23 minutes
Listening Post - Part One
Mary Thida Lun works is a civil servant. She has had postings in Sudan and Iraq. A seemingly ordinary girl, she is Oxford-educated and is dating a cavalry officer. However she has her own story to tell - a family story from the killing fields of Cambodia.
7/21/2010 • 23 minutes, 29 seconds
Shaking the World - Part Two
Part Two of this series looks outwards at the potentially world-shaking clash of cultures between non-democratic state-planned China and the American-centred world of democracy and free market ideology.
7/19/2010 • 23 minutes, 10 seconds
The Greatest Hits of the World - Part 2
The song Wimoweh, or The Lion Sleeps Tonight has been exposed to a mass audience with its inclusion in the musical The Lion King.
It is reportedly worth $16 million, but the composer died in poverty. Listen to the story of a song in search for justice.
7/16/2010 • 18 minutes, 31 seconds
China Shaking the World - part one
Michael Robinson examines the political, economic and cultural mechanisms of China's growing global influence - and how its rise to superpower status is being accelerated by the world recession.
7/12/2010 • 23 minutes, 18 seconds
Stand By Me
Ben E King says of his song Stand By Me "It tends to fall in place for someone who needs it." What are the other factors that come into play for a song to endure across boundaries and generations?
7/9/2010 • 17 minutes, 41 seconds
Assignment: The Families of Manshiyet Nasser
Catherine Miller reports from one of Cairo's biggest slums where - in 2008 - a massive rock slide swept away dozens of homes killing many people. Two year's on what's happened to the families of Manshiyet Nasser?
7/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Caribbean voices - Part one
The BBC's seminal role in launching Caribbean writing in the region is remembered 60 years on in Caribbean Voices.
7/6/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Every Picture Tells A Story
"A good photograph has an emotional component, the iconic photos hit you right away and they stay with you, and you just can't forget it." Razia Iqbal investigates the power of modern images and their ability to appeal to our imagination.
7/5/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
Home from Home Part Two
London based British-Asian DJ, Bobby Friction travels to North America to find out more about the Canadian members of his family. How does closer inspection of one's family inform us about who we are and where we come from?
7/2/2010 • 22 minutes, 43 seconds
Assignment: Arizona's Immigration Law SB1070
Arizona has passed a law cracking down on illegal immigrants -- the toughest of its kind in the US. It allows police officers to check the immigration status of anyone they stop or detain, if there’s a suspicion that the person is in America illegally. Driving it is frustration both at Arizona’s role as the main hub for illegal entry into America, and the organised cross border crime that’s come with it. Many support the law. But there is anger and fear among the Latino community: Legal citizens say they will be targeted by police just because of their skin. For Assignment Rob Walker travels to Arizona to explore why immigration has become such a hot political issue in the state.
7/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Tiger v Dragon: China's String of Pearls (part two)
Mukul Devichand explores the rising Asian giants, China and India. How will the old acrimony between the world's most populous nations shape the new faultlines of power in Asia and the wider world?
6/30/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
The Power and the Passion - Part Four
With the World Cup underway, many fans will be avidly debating the fate of their nations in the tournament, but it is at domestic level where football has the most support. Follow David Goldblatt as he adventures into the meaning and madness of the game. Fourth and last stop, the English Premiership’s beleaguered Newcastle United.
6/28/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Home from Home Part One
How does one's family history alter one's sense of sefl? Nihal Arthanayake - a successful London DJ - travels to Sri Lanka to find out more about his maternal grandfather, a lawyer and politician who was murdered in 1940.
6/25/2010 • 22 minutes, 13 seconds
Assignment: Spain's Hard Times
Pascale Harter reports from Spain for Assignment to see how families there are coping with record unemployment as the government slashes public spending to cope with its massive budget deficit. As she discovers, many people are turning to their families to get them through the hard times.
6/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Tiger v Dragon: The Power of the Poor (part one)
Mukul Devichand explores the rising Asian giants, China and India. In the churn and tumult of India and China's rapid economic growth, which country has done more to lift the lives of its hundreds of millions of very poor?
6/23/2010 • 23 minutes, 20 seconds
The Power and the Passion - Part Three
With the World Cup underway, many fans will be avidly debating the fate of their nations in the tournament, but it is at domestic level where football has the most support. Follow David Goldblatt as he adventures into the meaning and madness of the game. Third stop, the Ghana derby.
6/21/2010 • 23 minutes, 21 seconds
Aung San Suu Kyi: Freedom from Fear
Aung San Suu Kyi leads the pro-democracy movement in Burma. She has been under house arrest for 17 years. A personal look at the woman behind the political icon.
6/18/2010 • 23 minutes, 48 seconds
South Africa's Path to Freedom - Part Two
Nobel Prize-winning Nigerian author Wole Soyinka travels to South Africa to assess the past and present of the rainbow nation through the eyes of its finest writers. How has the post-Apartheid nation evolved?
6/16/2010 • 21 minutes, 55 seconds
The Power and the Passion - Part Two
With the World Cup underway, many fans will be avidly debating the fate of their nations in the tournament, but it is at domestic level where football has the most support. Follow David Goldblatt as he adventures into the meaning and madness of the game. Second stop, the Cairo derby.
6/14/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
Crime, Scene, Insects
Amoret Whitaker is a forensic entomologist. She is called in to help on cases where it is difficult to determine the time of death. How does the study of insects help to solve crimes?
6/11/2010 • 22 minutes, 29 seconds
Assignment: India's Maoist Insurgency
The Indian government is engaged in its biggest ever offensive against Maoist insurgents in Jharkand state in eastern India. Large swathes of the territory are under rebel control and access to the area is rare. British Anthropologist Alpa Shah has visited a Maoist-controlled region in Jharkand and this is her unique portrait of day to day life in some of the region's poorest villages.
6/10/2010 • 23 minutes, 22 seconds
South Africa's Path to Freedom - Part One
Nobel Prize-winning Nigerian author Wole Soyinka travels to South Africa to assess the past and present of the rainbow nation through the eyes of its finest writers. How has the post-Apartheid nation evolved?
6/9/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
The Power and the Passion - Part One
With the World Cup fast approaching many fans will be avidly debating the fate of their nations in the tournament, but it is at domestic level where football has the most support. Follow David Goldblatt as he adventures into the meaning and madness of the game. First stop, the Milan derby.
6/7/2010 • 23 minutes, 15 seconds
In the Shadow of the Stadium
What is the mood of South Africa ahead of the 2010 World Cup? Audrey Brown talks to those who cannot wait to welcome the world to South Africa, as well as others who are more skeptical.
6/4/2010 • 22 minutes, 3 seconds
Assignment: Thawil - the Red Shirt protestor
When Thai soldiers stormed an anti-government protest in Bangkok last month more than 80 people were killed. Thawil - a rice farmer from the northeast of the country - was one of them. Assignment tell his story, who he was and what his death signals for Thailand's future.
6/3/2010 • 24 minutes, 30 seconds
The Travelling Electric
In 1951, a black man named Willie McGee was executed in Mississippi's travelling electric chair - the only one of its kind in the country. His granddaughter explores this lost episode in America's early civil rights history.
6/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 3 seconds
Thank You for My Freedom
Former Beirut hostage John McCarthy has never thanked Giandomenico Picco, the United Nations negotiator who arranged his release. In this documentary John at last travels to meet him and explores the development of the role of the crisis negotiator.
5/31/2010 • 23 minutes, 23 seconds
Nightingales and Roses
Iran has an enthralling literary landscape. Poetry extends to all areas of Iranian life: scolding children, romanitc encounters and political protest. How has the Persian passion for poetry has shaped Iranian identity?
5/28/2010 • 23 minutes, 7 seconds
Assignment: Jamaica's 'Godfather'
This week's Assignment comes from Jamaica where there have been pitched street battles between police and supporters of an alleged drugs lord. Nina Robinson has been investigating the power and appeal of Michael Christopher Coke - the man known as Dudus - who's wanted on charges of drugs trafficking by the United States.
5/27/2010 • 23 minutes, 8 seconds
The Art of War
The Chinese general Sun Tzu wrote a treatise called The Art of War over 2,500 years ago. From conflicts in Ireland to Iraq, the BBC explores how his words have influenced military warfare since.
5/26/2010 • 22 minutes, 17 seconds
Soft Power - Part Two
The ability to get what you want by attracting and persuading others to adopt your goals is known as soft power. Philip Dodd examines the areas where this art of persuasion is being used. In part two Philip Dodd finds out if the values and culture of India can rival those of China - to make New Delhi Asia's soft superpower.
5/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 6 seconds
Global Perspective - Wedge Island
Wedge Island is located in a secluded spot on the rugged, windswept Indian Ocean coastline off Australia. It is occupied by squatters who will be evicted when a new highway arrives. How are the people there dealing with this change in fortunes?
5/21/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
Assignment: Swine Flu: Panic or Pandemic
In June 2009 the head of the World Health Organisation declared swine flu a global pandemic. Governments around the world sprang into action and ordered millions of doses of vaccine. But in the event thousands, not millions died, and swine flu proved to be less dangerous than ordinary seasonal flu. So why did the WHO announce a pandemic and were they right to do so? Imogen Foulkes visits two countries in Europe, one of which ordered 90 million doses of vaccine and used just ten per cent of them, the other of which ordered none.
5/20/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Would You Kill The Big Guy - Part Two
A runaway train is heading towards five people. You're standing on a footbridge, next to a very big man and the only way you can stop the train is to push the big man onto the track. His bulk will stop the train and five lives will be spared. Would you do it? Steve Evans explores how these moral conundrums are dealt with in crises like war.
5/19/2010 • 23 minutes, 8 seconds
Soft Power - Part One
The ability to get what you want by attracting and persuading others to adopt your goals is known as soft power. Philip Dodd examines the areas where this art of persuasion is being used. In the first part, he takes a look at how China's global charm offensive is taking shape - why they want to be loved and take the world's attention.
5/17/2010 • 22 minutes, 51 seconds
Global Perspective - The Lonely Funeral
Civil servant Ger Frits and poet Frank Starik come together in their shared determination that those who die alone in Amsterdam have a respectful and personal funeral.
5/14/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Assignment: A Taliban Class War?
In Pakistan, the Taliban are continuing to attract recruits, despite the fact that their violent methods have outraged most Pakistanis.
For Assignment, Owen Bennett-Jones investigates the Taliban’s appeal – and asks how much it’s based on class conflict, rather than religious faith.
5/13/2010 • 22 minutes, 45 seconds
Would you kill the big guy?
A runaway train is heading towards five people. You're standing on a footbridge, next to a very big man and the only way you can stop the train is to push the big man onto the track: his bulk will stop the train; five lives will be spared. Would you?
Steve Evans explores how these moral conundrums are dealt with in crises like war.
5/12/2010 • 23 minutes, 5 seconds
Cracking The Code
The BBC's Security Correspondent Gordon Corera gains exclusive access to Britain's ultra secret listening station where super computers monitor the world's communications traffic.
5/10/2010 • 23 minutes, 17 seconds
Global Perspective - Middle C
A year-long transition from woman to man, chronicled by Tristan Whiston through the change in his singing voice.
5/7/2010 • 23 minutes, 19 seconds
Assignment: Goldmine Sachs
Assignment investigates how Goldman Sachs has made record profits since it was bailed out by the US government in 2008. Reporter Matt Prodger reveals that the firm is still operating as an investment bank, trading in exotic derivatives, more than a year after it turned itself into a regular bank holding company.
5/6/2010 • 22 minutes, 49 seconds
The Other Guantanamo
Award-winning travel writer Polly Evans goes in search of the other Guantanamo, talking to local people about their home and how they feel about it becoming synonymous with what Amnesty International called "the gulag of our times".
She delves into the history of the open-ended American lease of this corner of the island - and asks whether the nearly ten thousand Cubans who held construction jobs on the site (and still draw a favourable US pension) have different feelings about it.
5/5/2010 • 22 minutes, 29 seconds
The Price of Bio Fuels - Part Two
What are the practical and moral issues around this alternative energy source? Gerry Northam reports.
5/3/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Global Perspective - Living in Limbo
In the UK, failed asylum seekers like Collen have no rights to accommodation or benefits. They cannot work. And yet it could be dangerous for him to return to Zimbabwe. What is it like for him and others like him to be living in limbo?
4/30/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
Assignment - Inside Britain's Class System
With the British election on May 6th, the BBC’s Nina Robinson examines the class system to see how far it is still relevant to people living in Britain today.
4/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 17 seconds
The Apostle's Workshop
Apostle Asafo guides us around his remarkable workshops in Accra, where teenagers can learn trades. Is it really sustainable?
4/28/2010 • 23 minutes, 11 seconds
The Price of Bio Fuels - Part One
Gerry Northam investigates claims that bio fuels - once believed to be the answer to global warming and dwindling oil stocks - are instead leading to heightened pollution, environmental havoc, deforestation, and worsening poverty and hunger.
4/26/2010 • 23 minutes, 31 seconds
On the Edge in Soweto
Unemployment in Soweto is well above the national average for South Africa. How are young people like Anza, Freddy and Sibusiso coping with long-term job searching and the daily temptations to make a fast - rather than an honest - buck?
4/23/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
Assignment: Total Recall - The Toyota Story
Toyota, the world's biggest car company, is in crisis, accused of putting the public at risk by selling cars that could potentially accelerate out of control. A company respected for years for its core principles, its reputation is now badly damaged. Justin Rowlatt asks how this happened and whether Toyota can recover.
4/22/2010 • 22 minutes, 55 seconds
Looking for Jaballah Matar
Libyan dissident Jaballah Matar disappeared 20 years ago, and his son Hisham is investigating his fate. Razia Iqbal reports.
4/21/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Generation Jihad - Part Three
Peter Taylor investigates the terrorist threat from young Muslim extremists radicalised on the internet. In part three he looks at why the British government is now investing big money in trying to combat the appeal of radical Islam. But will its strategy work?
4/19/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Return to Trebizond - Part Two
In 1923 hundreds of thousands of Christian and Muslims moved between what is now modern Greece and Turkey. What do these communities share after years of political division?
4/16/2010 • 23 minutes, 17 seconds
Assignment - Zimbabwe's New Farmers
It's ten years since Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe initiated a land reform programme which saw the forced transfer of white commercial farms into black ownership. Since then the country has been through a period of political turmoil and sharp economic decline. For Assignment, Dan Isaacs travels through Zimbabwe to see what price people have paid for reform and to meet the new owners of the land.
4/15/2010 • 22 minutes, 47 seconds
Living With Tourists - Part Two
How does tourism affect local culture? In the second part of Living With Tourists, Ros Atkins visits holiday destinations in England and the Caribbean where people have been arguing that tourism ignores the importance of culture at its peril.
4/14/2010 • 22 minutes, 55 seconds
Generation Jihad - Part Two
Peter Taylor investigates the terrorist threat from young Muslim extremists radicalised on the internet. In part two he finds out how a network of young jihadists - that stretched across three continents - were plotting together with murderous intent.
4/12/2010 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
Return to Trebizond
In 1923 hundreds of thousands of Christian and Muslims moved moved between what is now modern Greece and Turkey. What do these communities share after years of political division?
4/9/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Assignment - the French Burqa Ban
With several European countries now considering banning face veils in public places, Claire Bolderson reports from France, home to Europe's biggest muslim population, and the place where heated debate over the Niqab began.
4/8/2010 • 22 minutes, 59 seconds
Living With Tourists - Part One
Is tourism encroaching on lives, highlighting inequalities and causing antipathy between visitors and hosts? BBC presenter Ros Atkins visits tourist hotspots in England and the Caribbean to examine attitudes to tourism and tourists.
4/7/2010 • 23 minutes, 19 seconds
Generation Jihad
In the first of a three-part series, Peter Taylor investigates the terrorist threat from young Muslim extremists radicalised on the internet.
4/5/2010 • 23 minutes, 20 seconds
My World
Diverse short films that represent humanity. That was the end result of the BBC World Service My World competition. Simon Pitts talks to some of the film-makers whose work featured in this remarkable mosaic of humanity.
4/2/2010 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Assignment: The Art of Match-Fixing
A series of recent arrests across Europe has highlighted the growing threat of match-fixing in European football. How are the games rigged? David Goldblatt investigates.
4/1/2010 • 22 minutes, 52 seconds
Queenan's Crime Scenes - Part Two
American author Joe Queenan visits Sweden, perhaps the most exciting and important centre for crime fiction over the last two decades, most recently offering up Stieg Larsson's international phenomenon, the Millennium trilogy.
3/31/2010 • 22 minutes, 57 seconds
The Great Writ
The writ of Habeas Corpus prevents an individual from unlawful detention. Historically it safeguards individuals from arbitrary state imprisonment. Frances Fyfield explores this tremendously important principle we often take for granted.
3/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
The Great Writ
The writ of Habeas Corpus prevents an individual from unlawful detention. Historically it safeguards individuals from arbitrary state imprisonment. Frances Fyfield explores this tremendously important principle we often take for granted.
3/29/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
Shed Men
Australian men are typically defined as confident and unassailable characters, but this stereotype is outdated, and has made it difficult for today's generation to open up when times are tough. How can community sheds help?
3/26/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
Assignment - Love and Morals in Mangalore
Tinku Ray reports from Mangalore in south India where street vigilantes are making it dangerous for young couples to walk hand in hand in public - especially if they don't share the same religion.
3/25/2010 • 22 minutes, 51 seconds
Queenan's Crime Scenes
American author Joe Queenan's passion for crime fiction sees him heading to two very different locations to find out about the nature of the crime there and how it is reflected in the indigenous hard-boiled literature.
3/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 44 seconds
Road to Rwanda
"I don't know anything about the genocide. I didn't kill anyone or steal from anyone. I just want to get back to my home, to my family property with my children," Sorious Samura follows Vestine, a Hutu refugee as she returns home to Rwanda after the genocide.
3/22/2010 • 23 minutes, 6 seconds
The Other Internet
China patrols its cyberspace carefully. The government there closes down hundreds of websites each year and blocks access to many international websites.How do Chinese citizens get over the great firewall of China?
3/19/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
Afghan Bloggers
Najieh Ghulami looks at the way bloggers in Afghanistan operate and how increased internet penetration will help the country's development.
3/17/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
The Virtual Revolution - Homo Interneticus
Dr Aleks Krotoski concludes her investigation of the internet twenty years on by asking whether our brains are being rewired by the net. Are Facebook and other social media infantilising and corrupting young minds, or will they encourage a new cooperative way of thinking?
3/15/2010 • 23 minutes, 2 seconds
Internet Cafe Hobo - Part Three
Nick finds that internet cafes are not just a way to stay in contact with family, friends and football results.
3/12/2010 • 23 minutes, 14 seconds
Assignment: Hackers For Hire
An investigation into the expertise of Russian hackers. What makes them so good at breaking cyberdefences?
3/11/2010 • 22 minutes, 56 seconds
Online dating in India
The people behind the booming online dating industry in India believe they are transforming society.
But critics say they are just cementing old prejudices.
Can this new online revolution really cross the digital divide to the large majority of Indians who still scarcely understand what the Internet offers?
3/10/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
The Virtual Revolution - The Cost Of Free
How commerce has colonised the web - and how web users are paying for what appear to be free sites and services in hidden ways.
3/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
Spanning the World - Part Two
The Ponte Milvio, the bridge that spans the Tiber river in Rome, is a site of both romantic and religious pilgrimage. What place has the bridge had in ancient - and modern - history?
3/5/2010 • 22 minutes, 53 seconds
Great Expectations, part two
Nina Robinson returns to east London for the second part of Great Expectations, the series discovering the community living in the shadows of the London 2012 Olympics.
She hears from Hilary, who has two children, about why she does not feel initiatives from the government really work for families like theirs.
Nina meets up again with Darrell James who shows her the new investment at the nearby Dalston Junction train station.
Darrell says the change here is dramatic, more so than the development happening in the heart of the estate.
And we hear from local politicians and decision makers about the 'Legacy' plan - what will happen when the Games are over?
You can follow the community online at bbcworldservice.com/greatexpectations
3/3/2010 • 23 minutes, 25 seconds
The Virtual Revolution - Enemy Of The State
How has the online world impacted on global politics? Twenty years on from the invention of the World Wide Web, Dr Aleks Krotoski looks at how it is reshaping power.
3/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
Spanning the World - Part One
Italian artist Joseph Stella depicted the Brooklyn Bridge in New York as a metaphor for the immigrant experience in America. What does the bridge mean to people who cross it today?
2/26/2010 • 23 minutes, 12 seconds
Assignment: Taxing Questions for Greeks
No-one likes paying tax - but avoiding it is a way of life for many people in Greece, whose black economy is estimated to be worth more than a quarter of its GDP. This certainly hasn't helped the government as it struggles to bring down its budget deficit - which currently stands at more than 12%. So why do so many Greeks evade tax? For Assignment Ed Butler travels to Athens to try to get to the heart of the problem.
2/25/2010 • 22 minutes, 50 seconds
Great Expectations, part one
The world may be coming to East London in 2012, but the world is already represented and residing in Hackney, East London.
With the Olympics arriving on their doorstep, BBC World Service will be following the experiences of residents living in one inner city housing estate as they contemplate what the games mean to them and their future.
2/24/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
The Virtual Revolution -- The Great Leveller
Since its birth almost twenty years ago, the World Wide Web has transformed our world : A quarter of the planet is now online and able as never before to communicate, publish, and garner information seemingly without limits. But will the Web’s empowerment of ordinary people endure? As part of the BBC’s internet season, the computer expert Doctor Aleks Krotoski starts a four part series (this week) documenting the Web’s remarkable growth and asking if the old hierarchies it challenges are managing to stage a counter revolution.
2/22/2010 • 22 minutes, 49 seconds
Polar Bear Kebabs
Iranian Kazem Ariaiwand runs the most northerly kebab shop on the planet. This is his extraordinary story.
2/19/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Assignment - Mexico's Drug War
A war is raging between rival drug cartels along Mexico's border with the United States. Last year more than 7000 people were killed in the drug related violence and 2010 has already got off to a bloody start. For Assignment Katya Adler reports on the shocking consequences of the conflict on Mexican society.
2/18/2010 • 22 minutes, 56 seconds
Obama's America - The End of the Dream
As the United States endures its worst economic crisis since The Great Depression, historian Simon Schama explores the debate about the morality which has run through American history and asks about the future of capitalism.
2/17/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
New York's Catholics
The religious face of New York is being transformed. Once the preserve of the Irish Catholics, New York’s churches are now filled with Hispanic Catholics. The dominance of the Irish immigrant community has long been on the wane but not so the Irish leadership of the Catholic Church which is still led by an Irish American Archbishop. Maurice Walsh travels to New York to talk to Catholics about the leaders of their community.
2/15/2010 • 23 minutes, 17 seconds
Message in a Bottle
The fabric of island life as described through the most non-instant of communication devices - the message in a bottle.
2/12/2010 • 22 minutes, 53 seconds
Assignment: Unlawful Detention
Every year thousands of asylum seekers are detained in Britain. They are held while the Home Office decides whether to grant their claim for asylum or to remove them from the country. Its part of what is supposed to be a faster and more effective system for dealing with asylum. But there are claims that the government is routinely breaching its own guidelines -- and detaining vulnerable asylum seekers unlawfully. Rob Walker investigates for Assignment.
2/11/2010 • 22 minutes, 36 seconds
Obama's America - Part One
Simon Schama examines some of the daunting challenges facing Barack Obama, both on the world stage and at home. In part one he considers potential strategies for the president's inherited conflict in Afghanistan.
2/10/2010 • 23 minutes, 16 seconds
Opposing Obama - Part Two
Author and journalist Gary Younge tells the story of the other side of the Obama phenomenon, meeting people who think his presidency is nothing but bad news.
2/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 26 seconds
China's Forgotten Admiral
Zheng He was an epic seafarer who predates Columbus - and who symbolises China's martine supremacy. Why don’t more of us know more about him?
2/5/2010 • 23 minutes, 22 seconds
Textbook Diplomacy - Part Two
In Europe, school history textbooks are used to heal the wounds of conflict, overcome deep-seated antagonisms between neighbouring countries and achieve greater understanding among states that must work together politically and economically.
2/3/2010 • 23 minutes, 19 seconds
Opposing Obama - Part One
Author and journalist Gary Younge tells the story of the other side of the Obama phenomenon, meeting people who think his presidency is nothing but bad news.
2/1/2010 • 23 minutes, 18 seconds
Africa Kicks
Farayi Mungazi looks ahead to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa and explores how racial politics have affected football's development in that country.
1/29/2010 • 22 minutes, 52 seconds
Assignment - Ten Days in Haiti
On 12th January a powerful earthquake struck Haiti in the Caribbean. As many as 200,000 people may have been killed and some 2 million are in need of aid. In this edition of Assignment the BBC's International Development Corrrespondent Mark Doyle reports on Ten days in Haiti.
1/28/2010 • 23 minutes, 1 second
Textbook Diplomacy - Part One
Mark Whitaker looks at South Africa’s struggle to produce school history textbooks that are adequate and appropriate for the post-apartheid country.
1/27/2010 • 23 minutes, 24 seconds
Africa Kicks - Part Three
Adebayor, Droga and Essien are African football superstars who have found fame and wealth in Europe, but as Farayi Mungazi tells us, there are many who have failed in the quest for glory.
1/22/2010 • 23 minutes, 6 seconds
Assignment - Guantanamo Reunited
Gavin Lee tells the story of how a former prison guard at Guantanamo Bay detention centre sought reconciliation with two of his former prisoners.
1/21/2010 • 22 minutes, 43 seconds
Health of a Nation - Part Two
Business, money, demographics, politics - these are the issues preventing health reform from going ahead in the US. Michael Goldfarb looks at the complexities.
1/20/2010 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
Africa Kicks - Part Two
As South Africa prepares to host the 2010 World Cup, Farayi Mungazi, the voice of African Sport on BBC World Service's Fast Track, crosses the continent to explore the history of African Football and tells a story that is by turns epic and unexpected.
1/15/2010 • 23 minutes, 1 second
Closing Guantanamo
Assignment explores what President Barack Obama done in his attempts to close the Guantanamo Bay detention centre? The BBC's Jon Manel discovers why the US administration failed to meet the closure deadline set on the President's second day in office.
1/14/2010 • 23 minutes, 19 seconds
Health of a Nation - Part One
Michael Goldfarb looks at President Obama's mission to reform America's health care system.
1/13/2010 • 23 minutes, 28 seconds
Africa Kicks - Part One
As South Africa prepares to host the 2010 World Cup, Farayi Mungazi, the voice of African Sport on BBC World Service’s Fast Track, crosses the continent to explore the history of African Football and tells a story that is by turns epic and unexpected.
1/8/2010 • 23 minutes, 27 seconds
Arming Angola
Angola has also been described as one of the most corrupt countries in the world. Rob Walker re-traces the story of the "Angolagate" deal and goes on the trail of a story that changed the course of the civil war in the 1990s - and tracks down those who got rich because of it.
1/6/2010 • 23 minutes, 22 seconds
Sound of Snow and Ice
The Jyväskylä School for the Visually Impaired in Finland has one important aim: discouraging blind children from relying on high tech and expensive navigational aids. Find out how they help.