Did Goldman Sachs use insider information to profit from the financial crisis? How did a brokerage house, founded in 1869 by a German immigrant, become one of the biggest, most powerful banks in the world?
More info
What the world doesn’t know is that the cotton slave trade is not a mere memory, it is a reality lived out each day by the children of West Africa.
More info
They were the first to rise up against their leaders in 2009. The first to tweet, Facebook and YouTube updates, filming the fall-out of their failed revolution on cameraphones. Now, Iran has closed itself off to the Western press, making it difficult to get inside story from the ‘outside’.
More info
The bust of Queen Nefertiti is one of the most iconic images in the world — a crowd puller, attracting 500,000 visitors every year to the Altes Museum in Berlin. But is it a fake?
More info
We look back at how 9/11 has shaped our world. These personal and intimate testimonies of individuals come together to cast light on the overarching story.
More info
Those who dare to climb the Rwenzori mountains in Uganda are greeted by a scene straight out of a science fiction movie. We follow a group of young villagers who live at the foot of the of these perilous mountains.
More info
With roughly 3 million tourists a year, Jamaica is both heaven and hell – a place of unparalleled beauty and interest that is also home to extreme violence.
More info
Hundreds of thousands of South Korean students are plunged into a world of competition and are forced to attend a number of extra evening classes to the point of reaching exhaustion.
More info
In August 2011, journalist Sofia Amara entered Syria illegally to film the revolutionaries. She spent three weeks in Damascus, Rastan, Homs and Hama, accompanied by rebels and filming the scale of repression they faced.
More info