The Documentary Podcast: Archive 2015

Informações:

Sinopsis

The BBC World Service's wide range of documentaries from 2015.

Episodios

  • Sandhurst and the Sheikhs

    04/03/2015 Duración: 27min

    Four reigning Arab monarchs have passed through the UK's Royal Military Academy Sandhurst or its associated institutions - the kings of Bahrain and Jordan, the Emir of Qatar and the Sultan of Oman, alongside a long list of lesser sheikhs and princes, and many of the region's military chiefs of staff. Is training at Sandhurst Military Academy, bolstering militarised monarchies in the Arab world?

  • Maskirovka: Deception Russian-Style

    03/03/2015 Duración: 27min

    Lucy Ash examines the Russian military strategy of deception, maskirovka, from the 14th Century to the current crisis in Ukraine.

  • The Price of Inequality

    01/03/2015 Duración: 49min

    If the statistics can be believed, over the last 30 years the gap between rich and poor in the West has grown as cavernous as it was in the Nineteenth Century. In the US, for example, the richest 1% of the population is estimated to own more than 40% of the country's wealth. And it is a similar picture across the planet. But who are the 1%? How have they made their wealth? And why have the rest of us seemingly been left behind? Robert Peston speaks to leading policymakers and opinion shapers as he charts the new consensus that inequality is the biggest economic challenge we face.

  • The Bizarre Workings of St Louis County Missouri

    26/02/2015 Duración: 26min

    Claire Bolderson reports on the tiny independent cities that make up St Louis County and how they stand accused of fuelling community tensions

  • Gone

    25/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    As part of the BBC's A Richer World season, Rustam Qobil visits a desert where people have lost their sea, health and loved ones to a man-made disaster. He meets 86 year-old Khojabay who lives in Kazakhstan in the middle of a vast toxic desert made of mud, dust and pesticides – once The Aral Sea. 40 years ago his village was a seaside fishing port surrounded by freshwater lakes and barley fields, and he could catch up to 400 kilos of fish in one go. However, 26,000 square miles of sea is now called Aralkum or ‘The Aral Sands’ locally. When the Soviets started building dozens of dams and canals in the 1960s they deprived the Aral Sea of its two main tributaries and the sea started shrinking. Rustam Qobil travels to ‘The Aral Sands’ and hears from the people whose lives and families have been affected.

  • My Africa - Tanzania

    24/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    My Africa offers a series of inspiring snapshots of a continent working towards future prosperity. In the third part of this series, Alan Kasujja travels to Tanzania to investigate how its unique blend of modern and traditional music is attracting the world’s attention and helping social mobility – Africa doing things its own way, and leading.

  • Batting for the Middle Kingdom

    19/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    The Chinese Cricket Association has set itself the target of achieving Test match status and playing against the likes of England, Australia and South Africa by 2020, and a grass roots campaign to get the game taught in schools is well underway. Fred Dove investigates China's attempts to make itself a cricketing nation, and meets some of China's finest cricketers.

  • Banished to Papua New Guinea

    19/02/2015 Duración: 26min

    Australia is one of the most popular destinations for asylum seekers escaping their home countries. But Australia doesn’t want them. Asylum seekers dreaming of a life in Australia are being banished to camps in Papua New Guinea. Fariba Sahraei presents.

  • My Africa - Rwanda

    17/02/2015 Duración: 23min

    As part of the BBC's Richer World season, Alan Kasujja travels to three countries in his native east Africa to meet young Africans determined to build a better future. In the second programme, Alan travels to Rwanda, a country notorious for the genocide that took place there in 1994. Yet a bright new future beckons for some of its youth, as young female schoolteacher Jessie trains them in the high technology that promises to transform the nation.

  • The Palace of Shame

    16/02/2015 Duración: 50min

    The imperial summer palace in Beijing was looted and destroyed by French and British troops in 1860. Chris Bowlby discovers why.

  • Ukraine: The Untold Story of the Maidan Killings

    12/02/2015 Duración: 26min

    One year on from the massacre in Kiev’s Maidan square, when more than fifty protestors were killed. It was the events on Maidan that led to Ukraine’s pro-Russian president fleeing the country, sparking a confrontation over Crimea and now in the east of the country. So what did happen on Maidan square, an event that has pushed the world to the brink of a new cold war? Gabriel Gatehouse investigates/

  • Digitising Stalin

    11/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    For Stalin, privacy was key. So how would he feel about his secrets being revealed? The Stalin Digital Archive aims to release 400,000 pages of Soviet secrets from 1890 through to 1952, and may give us a new way of looking at this period, and at Stalin.

  • Egypt - Searching for Justice

    11/02/2015 Duración: 26min

    Claire Read has spent the last six months following a court case in Egypt and trying to get to grips with how the country's justice system operates under the government of President Sisi.

  • My Africa - Uganda

    10/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    My Africa offers a series of inspiring snapshots of a continent working towards future prosperity. As part of the BBC's Richer World season, Alan Kasujja travels to three countries in his native east Africa to meet young Africans determined to build a better future

  • Heaven and Earth: Le Ly Hayslip

    04/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    A Vietnamese woman's perspective of the Vietnam War. Her memoirs have inspired film director Oliver Stone and given an essential insight into the conflict between Vietnam and the US.

  • Tata: India's Global Giant

    03/02/2015 Duración: 27min

    Tata is the biggest industrial employer in the UK, owning Jaguar, Land Rover & Tetley. Now, the Tata family no longer controls the companies which bear its name. Can this powerful organisation hold onto its historic values in a world of the ruthless multinationals?

  • The Mengele Twins

    31/01/2015 Duración: 26min

    The testimonies of twins who survived the brutal medical experiments of Dr Josef Mengele during the second world war in Auschwitz.

  • The Best Nightclub in Africa

    30/01/2015 Duración: 49min

    World renowned DJ and BBC 1Xtra presenter DJ Edu is on a journey to find the best nightclub in Africa. This programme is part of the BBC’s Richer World season

  • French, Republican and Muslim, Insha'Allah

    29/01/2015 Duración: 26min

    In the wake of the recent attacks in Paris, do France’s Muslims feel there’s a place for them in the strongly secular Republic?

  • August Shines

    28/01/2015 Duración: 27min

    British actor Lenny Henry traces the life and works of August Wilson, the great black playwright, whose work brought the lives of working-class, Pittsburgh African-Americans to Broadway and across the United States.

página 9 de 10