Welsh investigative series
As the recession tightens, competition for jobs in Wales is getting stiffer. The programme follows some of the 104 applicants for a job as a council receptionist.
DetailsThe programme goes undercover with the loanshark investigators, and meets families struggling with mounting debts as spending cuts begin to bite.
DetailsFollowing the death of a five-year-old by an electric gate, Week in Week Out investigates the safety of the growing numbers of electronic gates in our society.
DetailsWith the sudden departure of its Chief Executive and a turbulent few months, this edition investigates the story behind the scenes at S4C.
DetailsWeek In Week Out investigates the Welsh Ambulance Service, described by some as the worst in England and Wales, which politicians had promised would be fixed.
DetailsEnvironmentalist Jonathon Porritt investigates claims the 10 mile long Severn Barrage will wreck a unique estuary and waste public money.
DetailsReporter Phil Parry returns to Llangeitho to investigate the health of the Welsh language in its traditional strongholds, and asks some uncomfortable questions about its future.
DetailsThe largest incinerator in Britain could be built near Merthyr Tydfil, and it could tackle Wales' waste problem. But would you want to live near it?
DetailsThe government wants to develop more British nuclear power stations. Three sixth formers examine the issues, travelling from North Wales to Normandy.
DetailsDocumentary series. An investigation into the impact huge rises in gas and electricity bills are having on the most vulnerable people in Wales in this bitterly cold winter.
DetailsProgramme examining topical issues in Wales. As the war in Iraq reaches its fifth anniversary, we tell the personal stories of Welsh soldiers injured on the front line.
DetailsOil wells are running low, sparking a surge in food prices. There are fears that, in the worst case scenario, this could lead to conflict and anarchy.
DetailsExploring the growth of evangelical churches in Wales. As 'traditional' congregations shrink, why are so many people choosing to be born again in Wales?
DetailsOn the eve of S4C's 25th Birthday, Richard Evans asks what the future holds for Wales' 4th channel?
DetailsAfter a spate of apparent suicides in Bridgend, Week In Week Out speaks to people in the town who are trying to make sense of what has happened.
DetailsEverybody in Wales will need to change their lifestyles to fight climate change. But are we and our politicians serious about tackling the problem?
DetailsProfessor David Reynolds examines the state of education in Wales after 10 years of devolution. Is the next generation being short-changed?
DetailsBestselling Cityboy author Geraint Anderson, once a London stockbroker, investigates how the banking crisis wreaked economic havoc across Britain's communities.
DetailsTopical issues in Wales. Will you be crunched by the credit crisis? Week in Week Out reveals the places in Wales where people are most at risk of losing their homes.
DetailsAs the Welsh rugby team prepares to defend the Six Nations championship, Week In Week Out looks at the battle over how to run professional rugby in Wales.
DetailsAfter another wet summer in Wales, the programme goes underground to investigate Wales' antiquated sewage system. How close is it to breaking point?
DetailsTopical issues in Wales. A look at maternity services in Wales, amid allegations that lives are being put at risk due to staff shortages and a lack of resources.
DetailsCardiff City Football Club are struggling to pay their bills. Week In Week Out investigates the health of the club and the role of chairman Peter Ridsdale.
DetailsMore people should be outraged by the numbers of people out of work and claiming benefits, an American welfare expert has told BBC Wales's Week in Week Out.
DetailsProgramme examining topical issues in Wales. Many manufacturing jobs in Wales have been lost to eastern Europe and further afield. So what does this mean for Welsh wage packets?
DetailsIn four years time the Olympic games arrive in London, but what's in it for us? Abigail Neal hits the tracks to find out if Wales will be finishing in the last place.
DetailsThe team investigate controversial claims that Crohn's disease may be triggered by a bug sometimes found in Welsh dairy products and water.
DetailsExamining topical issues in Wales. Rising fuel costs and port blockades threaten the Welsh fishing fleet. Is there any future for one of the nation's oldest industries?
DetailsWeek In Week Out travels to Spain to meet the Welsh couples who bought a place in the sun only to find out their dream home is illegal and could now be demolished.
DetailsFormer Velvet Underground star John Cale is no stranger to drugs - years of abuse could have killed him. Now he returns to Wales to find heroin causing havoc.
DetailsDocumentary. With post-stroke care in Wales lagging far behind that available in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, is it possible to catch up?
DetailsWeek In Week Out investigates how difficult it is to return to work when you are disabled or have been unemployed for a long time.
DetailsProgramme examining topical issues in Wales. The Harrassment Act was supposed to protect ordinary people, but some victims claim that the police won't support them.
DetailsFreemasonry conjures up all sorts of images, but what is the truth today? Week In, Week Out has been given exclusive access to film masons in Wales.
DetailsProgramme examining topical issues in Wales. The team investigate whether a new contract for NHS dentists is leaving Welsh patients paying the cost.
DetailsHouse prices in Wales have trebled in a decade but mortgage debt has risen sharply. Repossessions are at their highest level for eight years. Are we heading for mortgage meltdown?
DetailsThe M4, the most important road in Wales, was never designed to carry the millions who use it now. Week in Week Out talks to people whose livelihoods depend on it.
DetailsManic depression affects more than thirty thousand people in Wales. Comedian and writer Boyd Clack finds out what it's really like to live with its highs and lows.
DetailsIn classrooms across Wales, children are disappearing. They're not playing truant, and they haven't been officially excluded. So what's going on?
DetailsAre there too many older drivers on our roads? Jamie Owen speaks to bereaved relatives and safety campaigners about possible changes.
DetailsAs health experts hunt for the source of one of Wales's biggest legionnaires' disease outbreaks, the programme investigates if enough has been done to protect the public.
DetailsThe recession and the smoking ban have hit Welsh pubs hard, with five closing every week. A Week In Week Out investigation asks: is it last orders for the Welsh pub?
DetailsInvestigating the latest planning rows in the Brecon Beacons National Park, and asking whether the National Park authority be scrapped.
DetailsProgramme examining topical issues in Wales. A 90-year-old nan and her pensioner pals go into battle to save their care home, utilising the power of the internet.
DetailsLooking back on nearly 50 years of the BBC Wales current affairs programme
DetailsCanoeists are lobbying for a new law that would open Welsh rivers to us all, but anglers say it will leave their sport devastated. Week in Week Out investigates.
DetailsAn investigation of the plight of young Asian women who flee forced marriages, only to live with the daily threat of violence from their own families.
DetailsWith Cardiff's development plan now in some trouble, has the Welsh capital suffered from too many flats, shops and showpiece projects?
DetailsInvestigating how authorities are aiming to catch the sex offenders who are increasingly targeting children online.
DetailsAs the government steps up its efforts to deal with claims for asylum, Week In Week Out meets some of the people awaiting a decision on their future in Wales.
DetailsA look at the not-so-glamorous side of the Welsh fashion industry. The investigation uncovers a trail of debt, damaged businesses and fake promises.
DetailsWith the UK sliding towards recession and economists warning of thousands of job losses, Week In Week Out looks at the challenges facing the Welsh economy.
DetailsFormer Steps star Ian 'H' Watkins returns to his native Wales to find out what it's like growing up gay in 2008, having been bullied as a schoolboy in the Rhondda.
DetailsInvestigating whether rugby needs to be made safer. Battered bodies and shaken senses are on the rise at the professional end of the sport - is the amateur game going the same way?
DetailsA look at the BNP's European election campaign in Wales. The party says it has modernised; will this be a breakthrough election?
DetailsA look at topical issues in Wales. Britain's leading rail writer, Christian Wolmar, travels from Paddington to Wales to examine the state of the UK's railways.
DetailsTopical issues. Cage fighting is a brutal sport and is taking Wales by storm, while boxing is being offered in some schools. Should we be worried?
DetailsAs the second wave of swine flu gathers momentum, Week in Week Out visits Carmarthenshire to see how the pandemic has affected those villages worst hit.
DetailsSarah Dickins meets some of the people who lost their jobs in the 1991 recession to see if they have any advice for those facing the dole queue today.
DetailsWhat does the National Union of Mineworkers stand for? Week In, Week Out investigates claims that some people have been abandoned by the union in their latest legal battles.
DetailsThe programme examines how pop stars and evangelical Christians are running colleges offering courses validated by the University of Wales.
DetailsThe programme investigates the Welsh Defence League who say they want to rid Wales of Muslim extremists, and reveals another side to the movement.
DetailsEighteen-year-old Matthew White had a bright future ahead of him until he started smoking cannabis. His parents talk about how they believe the drug drove their son to suicide.
DetailsA campaign is underway to make the government accept responsibility for the thalidomide tragedy. We meet some of the Welsh victims to find out how they are coping.
DetailsFifty years have passed since Prince Charles became the Prince of Wales, so Week In Week Out talks to some of the people whose lives he has touched.
DetailsThis edition examines euthanasia and the Mental Capacity Act, and asks whether people should have more control over how to end their lives.
DetailsA group of party animals give up drink and find out about the world of binge drinking. Can anything convince them that getting smashed is a bad idea?
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