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
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Climate of Uncertainty
13/08/2004 Duration: 51minScientists have discovered that the Earth's climate is capable of changing abruptly. Could global warming bring the Earth to another such rapid change?
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Mandela: An Audio History
13/07/2004 Duration: 51minA decade ago, Nelson Mandela became president in South Africa's first multi-racial democratic election. Mandela's journey, from freedom fighter to president, capped a dramatic half-century long struggle against white rule and the institution of apartheid.
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The Hospice Experiment
13/06/2004 Duration: 51minThe '60s were a time of social movements and big changes, but a quieter revolution was underway too -- one led by a few middle-aged women who wanted to change our way of death. They were the founders of the hospice movement.
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Thurgood Marshall Before the Court
13/05/2004 Duration: 51minIn 1967, Thurgood Marshall became the first African American appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. But Marshall had already earned a place in history, as the leader of an extraordinary legal campaign against racial segregation in America.
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The Few Who Stayed
13/04/2004 Duration: 51minIn April 1994, the central African nation of Rwanda exploded into 100 days of violence, killing 800,000 people. Most turned their backs to the bloodshed. Here is the story of those who stayed.
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The Whole Thing Changed
01/04/2004 Duration: 04minThe end of major combat in Iraq did not bring an end to the fighting. American troops trying to rebuild the country found themselves surrounded by unknown dangers and escalating hostility from Iraqis whom they once viewed with sympathy. American RadioWorks asked medics with the Army's 101st airborne division stationed in Mosul, Iraq to record their impressions of the situation unfolding around them. The recording was made in December 2003 shortly before they returned to their base in Fort Cambell, Kentucky. Their story, along with a follow-up interview, aired on The World in April 2004.
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My Name Is Iran
13/02/2004 Duration: 51minIn 1927, Iran developed a legal code doing away with gruesome Islamic punishments such as stoning and lashing. That all changed during the Islamic revolution of 1979. NPR Producer Davar Ardalan and co-producer Rasool Nafisi look at Iran's long search for a lawful society.
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Whose Vote Counts?
13/11/2003 Duration: 51minThe newest voting machine technology may do little to lessen voter disenfranchisement or fraud, and it will do nothing for those that have lost the right to vote.
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The President Calling
13/11/2003 Duration: 51minKennedy, Johnson and Nixon left hundreds of hours of secretly taped telephone conversations. What can these tapes tell us about the presidency and the individuals that hold the office?
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Iraq: The War After the War
13/09/2003 Duration: 51minEven after the fall of Baghdad, the U.S. is still fighting.
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Korea: The Unfinished War
13/07/2003 Duration: 51minExamine the often-overlooked war that helped define global politics and American life for the second half of the 20th century.
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Investigating Sierra Leone
13/06/2003 Duration: 12minFormer Liberian President Charles Taylor faces international war crimes charges arising from one of Africa's most brutal civil wars. American RadioWorks followed investigators as they built their case against Taylor.
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Gunrunners
13/10/2002 Duration: 08minSmall arms pass from war zone to war zone through a global network of arms traffickers. This is a story about just one part of the illegal arms pipeline.
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Days of Infamy
13/09/2002 Duration: 51minDays of Infamy compares recordings of ordinary Americans reacting to Pearl Harbor and September 11.
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Nature's Revenge
13/09/2002 Duration: 51minEvery year, a chunk of land almost the size of Manhattan turns into open water in Louisiana, threatening the state's economy as well as vital American industries like seafood, oil and gas.
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Deadly Decisions
13/08/2002 Duration: 51minHow do jurors decide who should live and who should die?
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New York Works
13/08/2002 Duration: 40minJobs that are slowly disappearing in New York City and the people that keep them alive.
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Justice on Trial
13/07/2002 Duration: 51minFrom the trials of Nazis at Nuremberg to the prosecution of war criminals in the former Yugoslavia, to people's courts in Rwanda -- how effective is the machinery of international justice?
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Fast Food and Animal Rights
13/06/2002 Duration: 51minAn unlikely corporation -- McDonald's -- has taken the lead in the campaign for animal welfare.