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Driven to Distraction
Historian Rhys Jones asks if we really are more distracted than ever before.
BBC Radio 4
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No County for Young People
Comedian Sarah Breese attempts to reverse the trend of young people deserting rural Wales.
BBC Radio 4
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Parkland: One Year On
Dave Cullen tells the story of the Florida school shooting of February 2018.
BBC Radio 4
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Why Can't Our Children Talk?
Kim Normanton explores why many children start school without being able to communicate.
BBC Radio 4
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Beidh Aonach Amárach
Following competitors at country shows and fairs in Ireland.
BBC Two Northern Ireland
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Fatwa
The hidden story of the 1989 fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini against Salman Rushdie.
BBC Radio 4
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Fraud Squad
Follow the dedicated teams pursuing the criminals who steal billions every year.
BBC One
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Last Chance to See
A round-the-world encounter with species on the brink of extinction.
BBC Radio 4 Extra
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How the World Changed Music
Discover how global events and technological forces helped to shape modern music
BBC World Service
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Seeing Unseen Children
The stories that lie behind parents labelled abusers by society and the courts.
BBC Radio 4
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Uncle Sam and the Ayatollah
Jim Muir investigates secret contacts between the Americans and Ayatollah Khomeini.
BBC Radio 4
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Millennials in the Workplace
India Rakusen discovers how her generation is changing the workplace.
BBC Radio 4
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The Romanian Wave
They work in the NHS, farming, industry, so why do Romanians get such a bad press?
BBC Radio 4
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Searching For Swimming Pools
Writer Charles Sprawson reflects on his life as he copes with advancing dementia.
BBC Radio 4
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James Burke's Web of Knowledge
James Burke reveals how the most unexpected connections can be made across history.
BBC Radio 4
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Is This Sexual Harassment?
A group of people come together to try to understand what constitutes sexual harassment.
BBC Three
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America's Friends
Jim Naughtie examines what the Trump presidency means for America's old European allies.
BBC Radio 4
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The Trouble with Social Mobility
Byron Vincent raises some practical, and moral, questions about social mobility.
BBC Radio 4
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In Tooth and Claw
Charles Foster explores the bloody tension at the heart of his favourite nature writing.
BBC Radio 4
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The Trumped Republicans
Republican insider Ron Christie on how Donald Trump's presidency has changed his party.
BBC Radio 4
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I Feel for You
Jolyon Jenkins examines empathy and narcissism: effectively two sides of the same coin.
BBC Radio 4
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The Battles That Won Our Freedoms
A new series exploring the long history of struggles for liberty in Britain.
BBC Radio 4
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Brexit: Bewitched, Bothered or Bewildered
Adrian Chiles explores views on Brexit with voters he first met for the BBC two years ago
BBC Radio 4
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Remembering Iolaire
The anniversary of the shipwreck of the Iolaire at the end of the First World War
BBC Radio 4
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New Year Solutions
Jo Fidgen looks at the ways ordinary people can help tackle the threat of global warming
BBC Radio 4
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As Others See Us
Neil MacGregor visits 5 other countries to find out how leading figures there see Britain.
BBC Radio 4
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Andrew Davies: Rewriting the Classics
A profile of Britain’s best-known screenwriter as he embarks on Les Misérables. From 2018.
BBC Four
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Billy Connolly: Made in Scotland
Intimate interviews with Billy Connolly, exploring what made him the man he is today.
BBC Two
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There Was A Young Fellow Named Palin
Michael Palin asks James Peak to write him some limericks. What could possibly go wrong?
BBC Radio 4
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Game Over, Humans
Pro poker player and comedian Ken Cheng explores games in which humans were beaten by AI.
BBC Radio 4
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Victoria & Albert: The Royal Wedding
Lucy Worsley restages the wedding of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.
BBC Two
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The Noisy Page
Who are the noisiest writers? Cathy FitzGerald listens in on fictional soundscapes.
BBC Radio 4
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The Power of Twitter
The story of how Twitter accidentally became the 21st century forum for political debate.
BBC Radio 4
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George Soros and His Enemies
Allan Little examines George Soros's global mission and why some people react against it.
BBC Radio 4
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Marking Time
Lida Kindersley, well known letter cutter, on the art of marking time in stone and wood.
BBC Radio 4
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The Creation of an Icon
Iconographer and former Greek Orthodox monk Aidan Hart paints an icon for Advent.
BBC Radio 4
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Along the Peaceline
Two Northern Irish writers reflect on life alongside Belfast’s peacelines.
BBC Radio 4
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Drawing a Line Under the Troubles
Can those caught up in Northern Ireland's Troubles achieve justice? Peter Taylor reports.
BBC Radio 4
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Contracts of Silence
Tiffany Jenkins on the use and misuse of 'gagging clauses' or non-disclosure agreements
BBC Radio 4
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Brexit on the Border
What will Brexit mean for future generations? A young panel and audience explore the issue
BBC Radio 4
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In the Child's Best Interests
How and when should the decision be made to end the life of a critically ill child?
BBC Radio 4
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Does Trade Matter?
Economist George Magnus unpicks the trade wars and deals re-shaping the global economy
BBC Radio 4
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Belonging
Douglas Alexander asks what gives us a sense of affinity and belonging in today's world?
BBC Radio 4
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A History of Delusions
Experimental psychologist Daniel Freeman explores cases of delusion.
BBC Radio 4