Page last updated at 09:02 GMT, Wednesday, 12 January 2011 



DECEMBER 4 2005 
In response to audience demand, Panorama returns to some of the most important stories covered in 2005. 
NOVEMBER 27 2005 
The fight between Britain and France over the EU's future reaches a climax at the European leaders' summit. 
NOVEMBER 20 2005 
The stories of ASBO kids and their victims, six years after the controversial orders were introduced. 
NOVEMBER 13 2005 
The Panorama team has been on the road over the last two weeks giving people across the country the chance to ask the experts about Bird Flu and the threat it poses to human health. 
NOVEMBER 6 2005 
As the headlines warn of a flu that could kill millions and hype and hysteria threaten to confuse and alarm the public, Panorama presents the results of a four-month, worldwide investigation into bird flu and asks whether it is likely to trigger a human pandemic. 
OCTOBER 30 2005 
With increasing numbers of the British public saying they want a timetable for our troops to be withdrawn from Iraq, Panorama asks: is bringing home our armed forces the right thing to do? 
OCTOBER 23 2005 
Can the government fulfil its goal of ending "postcode poverty" within two decades? Following Kurt's family as they try to work their way out of a poor estate in one of Britain's most prosperous counties. 
OCTOBER 16 2005 
Panorama reveals how the rising rates for sexually transmitted infections appear to be overwhelming Britain's sexual health service. 
OCTOBER 9 2005 
Based on their public statements, Panorama constructs the sort of debate that might take place on civil liberties and anti terror legislation. 
OCTOBER 2 2005 
The inside story of the wedding of The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall. 
SEPTEMBER 25 2005 
Stephanie Flanders takes a bicycle tour of England and asks: is Gordon Brown's miracle economy built to last? 
AUGUST 21 2005 
John Ware examines questions raised by senior members of the Muslim community themselves: Questions about the direction and role of the Muslim Council of Britain and the influences on the leadership of the organisation and its affiliates. 
JULY 31 2005 
A journey into the increasingly violent world in which children are growing up, where violence can give you status and respect. 
JULY 24 2005 
Jane Corbin investigates the Afghan opium poppy harvest and the British government's war on the drug in the UK. 
JULY 20 2005 
A nurse worked undercover for Panorama secretly recording her shifts on a ward at a failing hospital. 
JULY 17 2005 
Panorama meets men who have served in more recent conflicts - and suffered severe psychological wounds - casualties of war whose injuries are serious and often disabling, but not immediately recognisable. The programme asks whether the military authorities are still failing some of those whose service exposes them to trauma and to horrifying experiences, which leave them damaged and hurt. 
JULY 13 2005 
Part one of a two-part special undercover in Britain's Hospitals. The programme investigates one of the country's biggest 3-star hospitals to see what is happening on the front line of hospital hygiene. 
JULY 10 2005 
Peter Taylor explores why it so difficult to track the people who now conduct attacks like those in London. 
JULY 3 2005 
Investigating why the world has failed to confront what President Bush calls 'genocide' in Darfur. 
JUNE 29 2005 
Panorama talks to the hostages who came home from Iraq and the families who lived through the crisis only to see their loved ones murdered. 
JUNE 26 2005 
As part of the BBC's Africa Season, Panorama has filmed one woman's struggle to stop mothers in her country dying. 
JUNE 19 2005 
How does cannabis change the way young people think? Panorama interviewed users of the drug. 
APRIL 24 2005 
Over the period of a year Panorama has filmed the reality of economic migration, following 11 East Europeans who came to the UK. 
APRIL 17 2005 
Panorama assesses the true picture of crime in Britain. Amidst claim and counter claim, it examines whether crime is rising or falling. 
APRIL 10 2005 
How do children and their families cope with bullying and who and where can they go to for help? 
MARCH 23 2005 
Panorama investigates how Customs and Excise, once regarded as the gold standard of criminal justice in Britain, fell spectacularly from grace. 
MARCH 20 2005 
How several of the claims Tony Blair made in public during the build up to the Iraq war conflict with what was going on behind the scenes. 
MARCH 6 2005 
Panorama travelled the world to create "The dollar a day dress" - a symbol of how the world trade system harms the poor. 
FEBRUARY 27 2005 
Panorama investigates Glasgow's sectarian divide and the efforts of the city's two major football clubs to bring an end to its presence on their terraces. 
FEBRUARY 20 2005 
Panorama investigates what lies behind the numbers that frequently make headline news and what is happening to the money being poured into the health service. 
FEBRUARY 13 2005 
Panorama asks whether Prince Charles could be prevented, by law, from having his planned civil wedding, revealing legal concerns and previous advice 
FEBRUARY 6 2005 
In one small city 17 young men committed 100s of crimes. The police found they all shared a grim secret: they had been abused as children by one of Britain's worst paedophiles. 
JANUARY 30 2005 
As Iraq holds historic elections, John Simpson looks at the state of Iraq today. Will the elections put the country on the road to peace or push it deeper into war? 
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