Apm Reports Documentaries

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 137:44:37
  • More information

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Synopsis

The documentary unit of APM Reports (formerly American RadioWorks) has produced more than 130 programs on topics such as health, history, education and justice.

Episodes

  • Finding Home

    13/10/2005 Duration: 51min

    More than 20,000 foreign children are adopted by Americans every year. Most come from poor and troubled parts of the world, and a life in America offers new hope. But it also means separation from their birth culture. Finding Home: Fifty Years of International Adoption explores the pull of adoption across lives and borders.

  • Power Trips: Pombo in the Gray

    13/10/2005 Duration: 05min

    Tax law prohibits members of Congress from taking international trips paid for by private foundations, but Republican Richard Pombo may have done just that.

  • No Place for a Woman

    13/09/2005 Duration: 51min

    In the 1970s, women began breaking into male-dominated professions as never before. Women took jobs as police officers, lawyers and steelworkers. Across the country, the first women in male bastions faced a hostile reception. In the iron mines of northern Minnesota, women were harassed, threatened and assaulted. Their fight to keep their jobs broke new legal ground and helped change the workplace forever.

  • Married to the Military

    13/07/2005 Duration: 51min

    The United States is making huge demands on its military people, the toughest since the Vietnam War. But most soldiers during Vietnam were young, single men. Today, in the all-volunteer military, about half of all service people are married with children, so the burdens of fighting these wars are shared back home.

  • Power Trips: Chilled Travel

    13/07/2005 Duration: 03min

    How has all the recent news about congressional travel changed the travel habits of those in Congress?

  • Power Trips: The Lobbyists' Loophole

    13/06/2005 Duration: 07min

    Over the past few years, private groups have payed for more than 4,800 trips by members of Congress at a cost of $14 million.

  • The Cost of Corruption

    13/05/2005 Duration: 51min

    Corruption skims billions from the global economy, locking millions of people in poverty. But a worldwide movement is fighting back.

  • Global 3.0

    13/05/2005 Duration: 51min

    For many, globalization has meant rich countries getting richer at the expense of the poor. Today, it's not that simple.

  • A Mind of Their Own

    13/04/2005 Duration: 51min

    Most children can be volatile at some point in their development, with no particular cause for worry. But at what point do irritability, mood swings, and tantrums constitute a mental illness? Up to half a million children are believed to have bipolar illness. This is the story of three of those children, their families, and the professionals who work with them.

  • Locked Down

    13/03/2005 Duration: 51min

    The supermax prison was designed to incapacitate dangerous criminals by locking them down in stark isolation. But do they live up to their promise?

  • No Place To Hide

    13/01/2005 Duration: 51min

    President Bush has admitted ordering intelligence agencies to electronically spy on American citizens without court oversight since 9/11. Such monitoring of suspected terrorists affects thousands of people. But unknown to most people, the government has also turned to the nation's burgeoning data industry to track millions of people in the name of homeland security. So for most Americans, there is no place to hide.

  • The Surprising Legacy of Y2K

    11/01/2005 Duration: 18min

    Five years after the hoopla and warnings about Y2K, many still dismiss it as a hoax, scam, or non-event. But in reality, Y2K was not only a real threat narrowly averted, it also led to changes in how we look at technology and economic shifts that are still being felt today. For the fifth anniversary of Y2K, we look at the history and the legacy of the millennium bug.

  • Justice for Sale?

    02/01/2005 Duration: 09min

    Thirty-eight states have elections for state courts around the country. These days, those races are getting more expensive, and can even run into the millions of dollars. Much of that money comes from special interests trying to elect candidates to the courts. That raises alarms bells about the independence of the judiciary, and calls for reform.

  • Carving Up the Vote

    13/12/2004 Duration: 51min

    One hugely influential issue in the last election got little attention: gerrymandering. Politicians have been tinkering with the boundaries of their electoral districts for decades, but in the last five years, the practice has exploded, and it led to the least competitive race for the U.S. House of Representatives in memory.

  • Is Wal-Mart Good for America?

    13/11/2004 Duration: 08min

    They were the kings of corporate America, but over the past 25 years, American manufacturers have lost that position of power. Today, America's largest private sector employer is Wal-Mart, a retailer so large, it virtually dictates many decisions manufacturers make, and is pushing American production overseas.

  • The Choice 2004, Part 2

    02/11/2004 Duration: 51min

    Two candidates for President, offering two directions for America. They are men of the same generation, Yale graduates from privileged New England families. But they took starkly different paths as they formed their values and politics. In this report, a dual biography of George W. Bush and John Kerry, and how their distinctive histories and personalities would shape their approach to the presidency.

  • The Choice 2004, Part 1

    01/11/2004 Duration: 51min

    Two candidates for President, offering two directions for America. They are men of the same generation, Yale graduates from privileged New England families. But they took starkly different paths as they formed their values and politics. In this report, a dual biography of George W. Bush and John Kerry, and how their distinctive histories and personalities would shape their approach to the presidency.

  • Red Runs the Vistula

    13/09/2004 Duration: 51min

    Five years after the start of World War II, the people of Warsaw rose up against the German occupation of their city. The uprising was meant to last just 48 hours. Instead, it went on for two months. A quarter of a million people were killed and the Polish capital was razed to the ground. It was one of the great tragedies of World War II, and yet it is rarely talked about outside Poland.

  • Witnesses to Terror

    13/09/2004 Duration: 51min

    During an 18-month investigation, the 9/11 Commission heard extraordinary testimony about the terrorist attacks on America. Witnesses told stories of lucky breaks and deadly errors. The commission pieced together new evidence and new details to tell the most complete story to date of the al Qaeda plot.

  • Suffering For Two

    13/08/2004 Duration: 08min

    More women than ever are taking antidepressant medication, including more pregnant women. For those trying to weigh the danger of fetal exposure to medication against the risk of a mother's relapse into depression, scientists offer mixed or even conflicting advice.

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