A look at who got tickets for the London 2012 Olympic games and whether private companies are profiting.
An investigation into two major 'fan-to-fan' ticket exchange websites to investigate who is selling via their websites and why so many tickets appear at over the face value so soon after the box office sells out.
Revealing how easy it is to buy our most personal and confidential information.
Investigating whether cutting up our credit cards and paying for everything in cash could leave us with more money in our pockets
Investigates the extent of the Assad family's culpability and the chains of command that link the President and select inner circle to the brutal crackdown.
Investigates just how close the Prime Minister got to the Murdoch empire. Did the Tories agree to help the mogul secure a business deal worth £8 billion?
Tony Nicklinson had a catastrophic stroke, which has left him utterly paralyzed. He has what is known as 'locked in syndrome' and cannot move, talk, feed himself or perform even the most basic function without help.
Reporter Morland Sanders goes in search of the people cashing in on the 2012 London Olympic Games, and questions whether the overall economic benefits of hosting the event have been oversold.
Dispatches investigates what's happened to the five-a-day campaign, which was designed to get us all eating more fruit and veg. Reporter Jane Moore reveals how this vital health message has been hijacked as a marketing tactic.
Jon Snow travels around the UK, meeting consumers, businesses and bankers, to ask whether we can trust our banks.
Investigates the controversial processes used to assess whether sickness and disability benefit claimants should be declared fit for work.
A look at the rise in high street betting shops and the social effect they have.
Investigates Jobcentre Plus, the organization tasked with getting Britain back to work and cracking down on dole cheats.
Investigates allegations of private landlords, councils, and housing associations overcharging leasehold homeowners for housing works and maintenance.
Tazeen Ahmad examines evidence that strategies to improve the food served in all our schools are fast coming undone.
As other High Street retailers struggle for survival, discount leader Poundland is booming. Its pre-tax profits are up an astonishing 50% in a year. Dispatches' Harry Wallop asks how Poundland sells so cheaply, yet makes so much money.
Investigating the multi-million pound retirement property industry.
Investigate the reality of life below deck for the multi-national workforce who toil behind the scenes of luxurious ocean going holidays.
Follows the former Greggs chief executive Sir Michael Darrington as he launches a campaign to call a halt to corporate greed.
Tina Nash investigates 'Clare's Law', a new pilot scheme in which men and women are warned by the authorities about their partners' history of violence.
Morland Sanders examines whether the rapid handover of services to private contractors is really good for the public purse, and good for patient care.
Provides unprecedented insight into Israel's internal tensions concerning an attack between Israel and Iran which, if escalates, could have major implications for global stability.
A look at the life and death of Neil Percival Heywood and whether he was actually murdered. His death, virtually unnoticed at the time, has gone on to shake China's Communist Party to the core.
Two years after the MPs expenses scandal, Dispatches examines whether our parliamentarians are still abusing the system. The investigation discovers a system still with problems and a lack of transparency.
Jonathan Miller travels to Rwanda - the jewel in the crown of British overseas aid - to investigate what British taxes have paid for, and to ask what our government has achieved with the influence our aid supposedly buys us.
As China continues to flex its financial muscle by buying into British airports, water and breakfast cereals, Dispatches investigates growing Chinese power in the UK.
Reporter Morland Sanders investigates whether security procedures that our banks tell us are impenetrable really are? He meets customers who say they have lost thousands of pounds through chip and pin fraud.
Matt Frei reports from the scene of one of America's worst mass shootings, unravelling the chain of events and asking whether this latest tragedy will lead to a real change in America's attitude to guns.