The UK takeaway industry is booming, but at what cost? Planning laws are being subverted and food safety legislation flouted in the battle to give us what we want when we want it.
Richard Bilton investigates events at Gosport War Memorial Hospital after an official inquiry found that more than 450 patients had their lives cut short, many given fatal doses of painkillers.
Adrian Chiles follows MPs through a historic fortnight in Westminster to find out who is in charge - and are they putting party politics before the best interests of the country?
Dr Faye Kirkland investigates how much we understand about the care being offered to transgender children at a time when more young people than ever are exploring their gender identity.
What's behind Scotland's rising toll of drugs deaths? Chris Clements reveals the growing abuse of prescription pills, investigating the illicit online trade in pills that is being driven by social media.
Richard Bilton meets the controversial landlord who is now evicting 90 families so that he can cash-in on his property empire and finds out what life is like for the families facing eviction.
Bronagh Munro examines the shocking way in which some academy trusts are running schools, speaking to former teachers turned whistle-blowers alleging nepotism, cheating on exams and financial irregularities.
They're one of the biggest and most powerful technology companies in the world, but can we trust the Chinese telecoms giant Huawei to build the next generation telecoms network in the UK?
Justin Rowlatt investigates the 3 days of disruption at Gatwick Airport, asking what really happened? Why no-one has been caught? Was there a drone at all? What needs to be done to protect our skies?
Jane Corbin investigates cases of child sexual abuse that were ignored for years by senior clergy in the Church of England and asks whether the Church has now learned the lessons of the past?
Across Britain it is getting harder to to get an appointment to see a GP. As demand increases there is a huge shortage of doctors and local practices are struggling to cope.
Lucy Adams explores the £1 billion industry producing one of the UK's biggest food exports and one of the country's favourite fish but is salmon farming really sustainable?
An undercover report inside a hospital for vulnerable adults showing how staff taunt, abuse and provoke patients with autism and learning difficulties then restrain them.
The first of a two part report revealing the failings of our social care system as our population ages and more and more of us need help with day to day living.
Reporter Mayeni Jones investigates an energy deal involving secret payments made by a controversial businessman to the family of a senior politician. Why has one of Britain's biggest companies invested in the project?
With more and more care homes closing and a shortage of carers, Alison Holt meets some of the vulnerable people threatened with selling their homes to pay for their care.
With alcohol-related deaths on the rise, Adrian Chiles investigates what we know about the dangers of drinking, and why the alcohol industry isn't telling us more.
Fiona Phillips investigates some of the lenders who have stepped in following the collapse of Wonga and asks why the cap on payday loans doesn't apply to other types of lending?
After a bruising round of campaigning and vote-offs, there are just two candidates left in the race to be the next Prime Minister, John Pienaar asks if either can end the Brexit deadlock.
With a no-deal Brexit looking increasingly likely, Jane Corbin travels around the UK meeting those who welcome it and fear it and examines preparations for it.
The introduction of lessons in primary schools designed to promote greater tolerance in society, including learning about LGBT relationships, has caused protests by, mainly Muslim, conservative religious groups.
For the first time, the politicians and negotiators on both sides of the channel tell the story of the key events, the mistakes and the miscalculations that made Theresa May postpone Brexit and forced her from office.
Hilary Andersson reports from Alabama, one of 12 US states attempting to overturn the constitutional right to abortion. She speaks to campaigners and politicians on both sides of the debate.
Stacey Dooley travels to Kurdish-controlled northern Syria to holding camps where she meets western women who left their countries to join the so-called Islamic State.
Britain's betting industry is booming. The amount we lose to the bookies has almost doubled in a decade. Bronagh Munro asks if they are doing enough to protect problem gamblers?
Has education funding reached crisis point? This film follows pupils and staff at North Denes Primary in Great Yarmouth where the headteacher has had to lose almost a fifth of staff to balance the books.
Chanell Wallace, whose brother was stabbed to death when she was 11, meets young people growing up in communities where carrying a knife is now normal. She sees how knife crime is ruining lives and the impact of knives on the classroom.
Jane Corbin investigates the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul and asks if the West has turned a blind eye in pursuit of lucrative trade deals?
The government has pledged to radically reduce carbon emissions to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. We'll need to make big changes to the way we live but how much difference will these changes really make?
Following the massive losses made by the man touted as the golden boy of investing, Neil Woodford, Richard Bilton investigates the secretive world of fund managers.
Andrew Verity reveals how billions of pounds of drug money is laundered in the UK each year. He follows the criminal cash from the streets of London to the gold markets of Dubai.
David Dimbleby travels around the UK to reveal why this is going to be the most unpredictable general election of his 50 year career. He finds a country divided as never before.
The government closed down investigations into alleged war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan before a single soldier was prosecuted. Has there been a cover-up at the highest levels of the British military?
Reveals how China runs its re-education camps, where more than a million people have been imprisoned. Uncovering the surveillance and abuse inside hundreds of new detention centres.
One year on reporter Catrin Nye returns to Flintshire in North Wales to learn if the roll-out of Universal Credit is still causing difficulties for vulnerable claimants there.
Greg McKenzie investigates accusations of financial irregularities at the Salvation Proclaimers Anointed Church, a charity dedicated to tackling gang violence and crime.