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| | After Tiller Sheds a humanistic light on the heated abortion debate by going inside the lives of the last four doctors in America who openly provide third-trimester abortions and the reasons their patients seek them. | |
| | Amá The untold story of the involuntary sterilization of Native American women by the Indian Health Service well into the 1970s. | |
| | Beatrix Farrand's American Landscapes Lynden B. Miller explores the life and work of America's first female landscape architect, Beatrix Farrand. | |
| | Busting Out An exploration of the history and politics of breast obsession in America, and its connection with breast cancer, breastfeeding and body image. | |
| | Can You Hear Us Now? Unravels the ways that years of minority rule by one party have reshaped democracy in Wisconsin, where voters are finding their lives increasingly irrelevant to state lawmakers. | |
| | Catching Sight of Thelma & Louise Explores the same women's and men's reactions to the groundbreaking film, THELMA & LOUISE, 25 years ago and today. | |
| | China Blue A clandestinely shot, deep-access account of how the clothes we buy are actually made. | |
| | Daughters of the Forest A group of girls in a remote forest in Paraguay are transformed at an experimental high school where they learn to protect the threatened forest and build a future for themselves. | |
| | Earth Seasoned: #GapYear Diagnosed with learning difficulties, Tori finds her greatest teacher in nature, spending a "gap year" living semi-primitively with four other young women in Oregon's Cascade Mountains. | |
| | Fight Like Hell Mother Jones, a fiery orator and fearless organizer for workers' rights, known as "the protector of children," and "the miners' angel," in a riveting performance by Lee. | |
| | A Fine Line - short version Explores why less than 7% of head chefs and restaurant owners are women, when traditionally women have always held the central role in the kitchen. | |
| | The Girl With The Rivet Gun Takes you beyond the iconic "We Can Do It" poster girl to the millions of real-life women who shook the foundations of the American workplace in WWII. | |
| | Let Them Eat Dirt: Looks at the role microbes play in the development, physical and mental health of our children, and argues that good health may begin with kids playing in the dirt. | |
| | The Lincoln School Story The 1954 fight for school desegregation led by a handful of Ohio mothers and children. | |
| | The Motherhood Manifesto Looks at the obstacles facing working mothers and families and the employer and public policy changes needed to restore work-life balance. | |
| | My Love Affair with the Brain Meet Marian Diamond, one of the founders of modern neuroscience, and an inspirational teacher to thousands at UC Berkeley and to millions on YouTube. | |
| | No Fear No Favor African communities on the front lines of the poaching crisis fight to protect their wildlife for future generations. | |
| | Overload Before she starts a family, Soozie Eastman wants to discover whether it's possible to reduce her body's--and by extension everybody's--toxic burden. | |
| | A Reckoning in Boston In prosperous and progressive Boston, what keeps the gap between rich and poor, white and Black, so glaringly wide? | |
| | A Sense of Wonder Rachel Carson's love for the natural world and her fight to defend it. | |
| | Symbiotic Earth Explores the life and ideas of Lynn Margulis, a scientific rebel who challenged entrenched theories of evolution to present a new narrative: life evolves through collaboration. | |
| | The True Cost Groundbreaking investigation of fast fashion reveals that while the price of clothing has been decreasing for decades the human and environmental costs have grown dramatically.
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| | The Vow from Hiroshima Marking the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, this is an intimate portrait of Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of Hiroshima, who has devoted her life to ridding the world of nuclear weapons. | |
| | The Vow from Hiroshima Marking the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, this is an intimate portrait of Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of Hiroshima, who has devoted her life to ridding the world of nuclear weapons. | |
| | We Are The Radical Monarchs Follows the Radical Monarchs, a group of young girls of color on the frontlines of social justice. | |
| | Who's Counting? Marilyn Waring demystifies global economics from a feminist perspective. | |
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After Tiller Sheds a humanistic light on the heated abortion debate by going inside the lives of the last four doctors in America who openly provide third-trimester abortions and the reasons their patients seek them.
The Alarm Rings Softly Caribbean women use drama and reggae to fight domestic violence.
All Different, All Equal Examines progress in women's rights globally.
The Amahs of Hong Kong Filipino women exploited as maids in Hong Kong.
American Outrage Two elderly Western Shoshone sisters, the Danns, put up a heroic fight for their land rights and human rights.
Amá The untold story of the involuntary sterilization of Native American women by the Indian Health Service well into the 1970s.
At the End of a Gun The devastating effect that the civil war in Sri Lanka is having on women.
Beatrix Farrand's American Landscapes Lynden B. Miller explores the life and work of America's first female landscape architect, Beatrix Farrand.
Because They're Worth It Micro-credit, education, health information, and hope provided to impoverished Chinese.
The Bomb Under the World What are the consequences of consumerism taking hold in developing countries like India?
Breaking the Silence: Truth and Lies in the War on Terror John Pilger dissects the truth and lies in the 'war on terror'.
Busting Out An exploration of the history and politics of breast obsession in America, and its connection with breast cancer, breastfeeding and body image.
Can You Hear Us Now? Unravels the ways that years of minority rule by one party have reshaped democracy in Wisconsin, where voters are finding their lives increasingly irrelevant to state lawmakers.
Catching Sight of Thelma & Louise Explores the same women's and men's reactions to the groundbreaking film, THELMA & LOUISE, 25 years ago and today.
Caught in the Crossfire Economic and societal pressures force women into the sex trade.
China Blue A clandestinely shot, deep-access account of how the clothes we buy are actually made.
City Life 22-part series examining the effect of globalization on people and cities worldwide.
City Life Explores Sao Paolo in introduction to series examining the effects of globalization on people and cities.
Community Micro-credit is transforming the lives of women in Bangladesh.
Community Animals Leading thinkers explore community, work, time, values, and change.
Complicit The cost of our global addiction to devices is revealed in the struggle of a courageous Chinese activist helping young workers poisoned while making smartphones.
Credit Where Credit is Due Micro-credit organization in Bangladesh provides loans to village poor.
The Cutting Edge Ugandan project attempts to change attitudes about female genital mutilation.
Dance Me To The End Of Time Set against the backdrop of Rachel Carson's The Silent Spring, the film documents the last 4 years of the filmmaker's life-partner, outspoken lesbian theater director, Nancy Diuguid's life, as she fought breast cancer.
A Dangerous Idea Examines the history of the US eugenics movement and its recent resurrection, which uses false scientific claims and holds that an all-powerful "gene" determines who is worthy and who is not.
Daughters of the Forest A group of girls in a remote forest in Paraguay are transformed at an experimental high school where they learn to protect the threatened forest and build a future for themselves.
Dead Mums Don't Cry Grace Kodindo's heroic efforts in Chad to lower the rate of maternal mortality, one of the UN's Millennium Development Goals.
Democracy à la Maude A Canadian woman leads the fight against unjust corporate globalization, and for social justice.
The Dilemma Of The White Ant Dominic Ongwen is both a victim and alleged perpetrator of LRA war crimes. Should he face an international court?
Divide In Concord A fiery octogenarian activist spearheads a grassroots campaign to ban the sale of single-serve plastic bottled water in Concord, MA.
The Doctor's Story The US debate over abortion has severe consequences for health care in rural Nepal.
Doing the Right Thing Porto Alegre, Brazil has benefited from urban revitalization.
Dry Days In Dobbagunta Literacy program spurs anti-liquor campaign in rural India and empowers women.
Earth Seasoned: #GapYear Diagnosed with learning difficulties, Tori finds her greatest teacher in nature, spending a "gap year" living semi-primitively with four other young women in Oregon's Cascade Mountains.
Educating Lucia The odds are against girls getting an education in Zimbabwe and throughout much of Africa.
Educating Yaprak Turkey's ambitious campaign to reduce poverty includes convincing reluctant parents to send their daughters to school.
The Enemy Within The story of Britain's longest strike, the 1984-85 miners' strike, when Margaret Thatcher declared war on the unions, as told by those who lived through it.
Fight Like Hell Mother Jones, a fiery orator and fearless organizer for workers' rights, known as "the protector of children," and "the miners' angel," in a riveting performance by Lee.
Fighting Back Women in Bosnia are rebuilding war-torn lives.
A Fine Line - short version Explores why less than 7% of head chefs and restaurant owners are women, when traditionally women have always held the central role in the kitchen.
A Fistful of Rice Protein deficiency threatens generations of children in Nepal.
Footprints of Sorrow Guatemalan war widows fighting for human rights.
The Forest For The Trees The amazing story of the fight to clear Earth First! activist Judi Bari's name after her car was bombed and she was arrested as a terrorist.
Fury for the Sound Women's contribution to the battle to save the rainforest at Clayoquot Sound.
Fury for the Sound (Short Version) Women's contribution to the battle to save the rainforest at Clayoquot Sound.
Galileo's Sons A rare behind-the-scenes look at the Vatican Observatory, and the cosmological questions tackled by the Jesuit astronomers there.
The Girl With The Rivet Gun Takes you beyond the iconic "We Can Do It" poster girl to the millions of real-life women who shook the foundations of the American workplace in WWII.
Girls from Chaka Street The break-up of the Soviet Union leaves some women with few options but prostitution.
The Gods of Our Fathers There is nothing innate in patriarchy and militarism. We can change our culture.
Grace Under Fire Dr. Grace Kodindo explores what help is available for the people, particularly women, affected by the ongoing and bloody conflict in North Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo.
Growing Season Horticulture dramatically improves prisoners' attitudes.
Half The Sky Changes in the lives of four generations of Chinese women.
Hayley, Rosamaria, Angela and Martens Revisits four children in England, Brazil, Papua New Guinea, and Latvia, who were born in 1992, the year of the first Rio Earth Summit, and measures the impact of globalization on their lives.
A Healthy Start The debate over women's health care in South Africa.
Heart Of Sky, Heart Of Earth Six young Maya present a wholly indigenous perspective, in which all life is sacred and connected, as they resist the destruction of their culture and environment.
Helen Nearing A moving portrait of the lives and deaths of homesteading authors, Helen and Scott Nearing.
Helping Ourselves! In India, two community projects help people move out of poverty and gain control of their lives.
Home of the Brave Examines the case of Viola Liuzzo, the only white woman murdered in the civil rights movement.
Homeland Tells the inspiring story of four battles in which Native American activists are fighting to preserve their land, sovereignty, and culture.
Homeland (Short Version) A shorter version of the inspiring story of four battles in which Native American activists are fighting to preserve their land, sovereignty, and culture.
The Human Race Is the western model of global development sustainable in a finite environment?
In the Name of Honour Kurdish women fight for their rights in Northern Iraq.
In the Name of Safety False imprisonment violates due process in Bangladesh.
Invisible Garments: Expensive Soles Nike and other multinationals are moving production to countries like Indonesia.
Jongsada Suwanchondee in Thailand HIV-positive, this former Thai heroin addict helps others understand AIDS.
Land of Widows Population and health problems in post civil war Cambodia.
Let Them Eat Dirt: Looks at the role microbes play in the development, physical and mental health of our children, and argues that good health may begin with kids playing in the dirt.
Letters from our Lives Disabled women write open letters to the world about their plight.
Life 30-part series that looks at the effect of globalization on individuals and communities around the world.
Life 4 A 27-part series about global efforts to achieve the UN Millennium Development Goals.
Life 5 A new 13-part series about globalization and the UN Millennium Development Goals.
Life 6 An 11-part series about the effects of globalization on people around the world, and the difficult choices they face as their countries struggle to meet the UN's MDGs.
Life 8 A new 16-part series about the effects of globalization on people around the world, and the difficult choices they face.
The Lincoln School Story The 1954 fight for school desegregation led by a handful of Ohio mothers and children.
Lines in the Dust In revolutionary programs in Northern Ghana and India, gender roles are challenged, and illiterate adults educated.
The Long Walk To Freedom A story of 12 ordinary people who accomplished extraordinary things in the Civil Rights movement.
Looking For My Gypsy Roots Hungarian film director Arpád faces a dilemma - should he track down his Roma father?
Lost Generations Poor health and poverty condemn people in India to sub-standard lives.
Midwives...Lullabies...and Mother Earth Fascinating look at pioneering natural birth doctor, Michel Odent.
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The Millennium Goals Explores the ambition and scope of the UN's Millennium Development Goals, and the obstacles to their achievement.
The Miller's Tale Efforts are underway in Egypt and Yemen to fortify flour with iron to wipe out needless malnutrition.
Missing Out Anemia threatens the population of Niger and Tanzania.
The Motherhood Manifesto Looks at the obstacles facing working mothers and families and the employer and public policy changes needed to restore work-life balance.
Mothers of Malappuram Literacy and access to health services slow population growth in India.
My Hanoi Tour of rapidly urbanizing Hanoi, and the effect on citizens and culture.
My Love Affair with the Brain Meet Marian Diamond, one of the founders of modern neuroscience, and an inspirational teacher to thousands at UC Berkeley and to millions on YouTube.
My Mother Built This House Large homeless contingent in South Africa has organized to build houses for each other.
No Country For Young Girls? A young Indian woman has to choose - stay with a husband who doesn't want female children, or make it on her own.
No Fear No Favor African communities on the front lines of the poaching crisis fight to protect their wildlife for future generations.
No Time To Waste Celebrates legendary 100-year-old park ranger Betty Reid Soskin's inspiring life, work and urgent mission to restore critical missing chapters of America's story.
Not The Numbers Game Six films from around the world on women solving the twin problems of population and development.
On the Way Sex education project combats teenage pregnancy in Peru.
Open Bethlehem The filmmaker comes home to Bethlehem to find the city being strangled by the Wall and ongoing Israeli settlements, and starts a campaign to keep Bethlehem open to the world.
The Other Side Poor Mexicans attempt perilous border crossing to US, often at the expense of family, traditional culture, and their lives.
Overload Before she starts a family, Soozie Eastman wants to discover whether it's possible to reduce her body's--and by extension everybody's--toxic burden.
Panjy, Amelia, Justin and Vusumzi Revisits four children in India, Norway, and South Africa, who were born in 1992, the year of the first Rio Earth Summit, and measures the impact of globalization on their lives.
Pavements of Gold Increase in urban poverty and population, caused by globalization, threatens Peruvians.
Phallacies An unfettered study of the penis's place in history, art, religion, and contemporary life.
The Pied Piper of Eyasi The Hadza are among Africa's last hunter-gatherers. Should they follow charismatic Baallow into the modern world?
The Prince A young Pakistani landowner chooses between trying to implement the MDGs in the village that his family owns, and a quiet life.
A Question of Rights Looks at the state of women's human rights in Ethiopia, Latvia, Jamaica and Fiji.
A Reckoning in Boston In prosperous and progressive Boston, what keeps the gap between rich and poor, white and Black, so glaringly wide?
Reclaim the Condom Trained advice columnist Sheila launches a campaign in Mozambique to promote condoms as sexy contraceptives - not weapons in the fight against HIV and disease.
Reel to Real: Balancing Acts Explores the international movement for women's rights.
Reel to Real: Holding Our Ground International efforts to assure reproductive health and rights conflict with cultural realities in the Philippines, Latvia, Japan, and India.
Reframing Rio 9-part series from the producers of LIFE looking at different aspects of the globalization issue and consisting of LIFE APPS(5 x 27 min), LOOTING THE PACIFIC (27 min) and ZERO TEN TWENTY (3 x 50 min).
Rena Mcleod in Canada An aboriginal mother fights for native justice.
Return to Kandahar Post-war Afghanistan, as seen through the eyes of Nelofer Pazira, star of the movie "Kandahar," as she searches for her childhood friend.
The Right to Choose Women are denied human rights in Ethiopia and northern Nigeria.
Rising Above Vietnamese women build on experiences of war.
Rosita The plight of a nine-year-old Nicaraguan girl, who becomes pregnant as the result of a rape, triggers a battle over whose life has precedence.
Running On Empty Highlights the plight of two young mothers - one in South Wales and the other in Northern Ethiopia.
Scent of the Streets Nigeria has had some success in getting more women into government and business. But what about in the crowded and often violent slums of Lagos?
Science For Survival Fusion of modern science with women's knowledge in India.
A Sense of Wonder Rachel Carson's love for the natural world and her fight to defend it.
Sex and the Holy City Investigates the impact on poor women and families of the late Pope John Paul's position on sex and reproductive health.
Shakuntala Kazmi in India A low-caste Hindu, Shakuntala Kazmi fights for women's rights.
Silk Ceiling, Part 1 Ritu Bhardawaj is an Indian TV reporter who has broken through the silk ceiling which narrows the prospects for so many women in the Asia Pacific region.
Silk Ceiling, Part 2 Indian TV journalist Ritu Bhardawaj goes to Bihar to investigate the invisible barrier that confronts so many Asian women.
The Silver Age Growing population of elderly worldwide seeks purpose and care.
Sorie K and the MDGs Blind musician, Sorie Kondi, from Sierra Leone looks at what's happening with girls' education in his country 10 years after civil war.
Srebrenica - Looking For Justice Examines the massacre at Srebrenica on its 10th anniversary.
Staying Alive! Poverty combined with lack of education and health services affect maternal mortality rates in Bangladesh.
Stephanie, Erdo and Kay-Kay Revisits three children in the United States, Kenya, and China, who were born in 1992, the year of the first Rio Earth Summit, and measures the impact of globalization on their lives.
Stop the Traffick Investigates horror of child sex industry in Cambodia.
The Story of Eman A Cairo girl's struggle to attain higher education.
Symbiotic Earth Explores the life and ideas of Lynn Margulis, a scientific rebel who challenged entrenched theories of evolution to present a new narrative: life evolves through collaboration.
Teach a Woman How to Fish And... Sea farming empowers women in Fiji.
Thirst for Justice Focuses on three battles for clean water—on the Navajo Reservation, in Flint MI, and at Standing Rock—united in the belief that Water Is Life.
this black soil Chronicles the successful struggle of Bayview, VA, to pursue a new vision of prosperity.
Three Sisters Eritrea's women fought in the war. Should they now liberate themselves from harmful traditional practices?
Till Death Do Us Part Widows are denied inheritance and property rights in Nigeria.
Trawler Girl A female trawler captain in Namibia exemplifies goals set forth for women in the Millennium Development Goals.
The Tree that Remembers Extraordinary film explores the lives of Iranian refugees who cannot escape painful memories.
Tribal Justice Documents an effective criminal justice reform movement in America: the efforts of tribal courts to return to traditional, community-healing concepts of justice.
A Tribe of His Own Indian journalist reminds us of the meaning of responsible journalism.
The True Cost Groundbreaking investigation of fast fashion reveals that while the price of clothing has been decreasing for decades the human and environmental costs have grown dramatically.
The Unforgiven Should General Butt Naked (née Joshua Blahyi) - now a Christian pastor - be forgiven for his role in Liberia's horrific civil war?
Unguarded UNGUARDED takes us inside the walls of APAC, the revolutionary Brazilian prison system centered on the full recovery and rehabilitation of the person.
Virtually Intentional Finding community in the cloister, a commune, and in cyberspace.
The Vow from Hiroshima Marking the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, this is an intimate portrait of Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of Hiroshima, who has devoted her life to ridding the world of nuclear weapons.
The Vow from Hiroshima Marking the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, this is an intimate portrait of Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of Hiroshima, who has devoted her life to ridding the world of nuclear weapons.
Water First An inspiring story from Malawi shows that clean water is essential for the achievement of the UN's Millennium Development Goals.
The Water Front In Highland Park, MI an unelected, state-appointed Emergency Financial Manager with quasi dictatorial authority sees water privatization as key to economic recovery.
Water On The Table An intimate portrait of international water activist Maude Barlow and the debate over whether water is a commercial good or a human right.
We Are The Radical Monarchs Follows the Radical Monarchs, a group of young girls of color on the frontlines of social justice.
We Still Live Here Tells the amazing story of the return of the Wampanoag language, a language that was silenced for more than a century.
Welcome to Womanhood Efforts to stop female genital mutilation in Uganda.
When Abortion was Illegal Devastating stories from the era of illegal abortion.
Who's Counting? Marilyn Waring demystifies global economics from a feminist perspective.
A Witch Story Deconstructs the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 in order to reveal their connection to contemporary witch hunts and examine women's struggles through a feminist lens.
A Woman's Place - Short Stories (on one DVD) Six short films about women and development by local women directors.
World of Difference Women and human rights around the world.
Young Wives' Tales Very early marriage threatens young girls' health and survival.
Zero Ten Twenty 3-part series revisits 11 children from around the world who were born in 1992, the year of the first Rio Earth Summit, and measures the impact of globalization on their lives.
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