Talk back to the 麻豆官网首页入口 and challenge the programme makers.
World Service,路804 episodes
Rajan Datar finds out how 麻豆官网首页入口 World Service selects its presenters.
How can radio benefit listeners in troubled areas of the world such as Afghanistan?
How did the 麻豆官网首页入口 get interviews with the Somali pirates holding a British couple hostage?
Rajan Datar talks to a listener who lived in West Berlin when the Berlin Wall came down.
Answering your questions about what you hear - and don't hear - on 麻豆官网首页入口 World Service.
The challenges of reporting British politics to an audience thousands of miles away.
Facing the challenges of reporting the Sumatra earthquake.
This week, a listener who thinks that the recent Aftershock season went on and on and on.
Rajan Datar looks at China's attitude towards the media.
The relationship between the western correspondent and the local fixer.
Was coverage of the climate change debate on One Planet unbalanced?
A look at the Aftershock season on 麻豆官网首页入口 World Service, marking the collapse of Lehman Bros.
A look at the changing relationship between broadcasters and their audiences.
Rajan Datar examines the changing media landscape in Afghanistan.
Rajan Datar takes a look at how the World Service has covered the global recession.
The programme hears reactions to the lifting of the 麻豆官网首页入口 reporting ban in Zimbabwe.
Who gets the final say in how a story is covered in the newsroom?
This week Rajan talks to the producer behind the documentary series, Iran and the West.
How social networking is challenging the control of restrictive governments
Rajan Datar looks at some of the issues raised by the media鈥檚 fascination with celebrities
Why are only some World Service programmes available as podcasts? Rajan Datar investigates
Why some listeners are fed-up with hearing about the World Cup
A look at the statistics used by the World Service programming team