Jean-Marie Guehenno, professor of professional practice at the Saltzman Institute of Columbia University, discusses the political implications of using the word "genocide". Guehenno believes that "genocide has enormous baggage", and...
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon highlights the prevention of large-scale violence prior to its incitement as one of his “generational opportunities.” He argues that the key to prevention is to promote equality...
London bus driver Josh West heads to the densely populated city of Manila, Philippines, to drive a Jeepney -- a colorful jeep with dodgy lights, no power steering, and an...
In this three-part documentary series, ordinary workers -- experienced, qualified and looking for a challenge -- find out what it's like to do their job under some of the toughest...
In this final episode of On the Road, Bob Holman travels to Israel and the West Bank, where he discovers that Yiddish, which once had five daily newspapers in New...
In Tribal Wives six women get to grips with new lifestyles, families and communities in some of the world?s most remote tribes to find out whether 'West is best.'
Link TV presents extraordinary documentaries that take you inside Iran to meet its people, to share in its culture, and to get to know this vast, multicultural land from the...
Prominent Occupy Wall Street activist Jesse LaGreca explains that in a stale economy, working-class Americans are being forced to make big sacrifices while major Wall Street players have still not...
Can the government be trusted to report its own data, or should it be up to reporters to unearth the truth? The Center for Public Integrity's Keith Epstein and NPR's...
Maggie Mulvihill, co-director of the New England Center for Investigative Reporting, and William E. Buzenberg, executive director at the Center for Public Integrity, explain that good news reporting comes at...
Journalist and author Glenn Greenwald contends that the reason media coverage of the Occupy Wall Street movement has ranged mostly from critical to non-existent is because many mainstream media journalists...
Featuring interviews with media analysts and cultural historians, this documentary examines the patterns inherent in TV's disturbing depictions of working class people as either clowns or social deviants.
(LinkAsia: November 4, 2011) The government in Myanmar seems to be opening up, but some people are wondering if the moves are genuine. Flooding in Southeast Asia has been devastating,...
Catherine Mulbrandon, creator of the blog Visualizing Economics, illustrates the distribution of income in the US, comparing the earnings of the top one percent to those of the bottom 99.