The Business and Economics Collection
From advertising and marketing to speculation and debt, The Business and Economics collection covers the field. Including stand-outs like the The Flaw about the 2008 financial crisis and Allan Sekula and Noel Burch's film essay on globalization, The Forgotten Space, this collection provides essential insights into the world of production, distribution and consumption.
The Business and Economics Collection collection includes the following titles:
Photojournalist's personal odyssey through the streets of Seattle during the WTO meeting.
Tells the shocking story of New York Times reporter Jayson Blair, the most infamous plagiarist of our time.
Workers at a textile factory on strike in pre-May '68 France, not just for more money, but for a different way of life. By Chris Marker.
Capitalism is much more complex than the vision Adam Smith laid out. Indeed, it predates Smith by centuries and took root in the practices of colonialism and the slave trade. (Episode 1 of the Capitalism series)
Reveals the history and worldwide scope of plastics pollution, investigates its toxicity and explores solutions.
The true story of the tobacco companies' commitment to addicting the human brain and how the world came to know about it.
Follows the mission of one theater company to bring the consumer revolution to the people of the highlands of Papua New Guinea.
Diagnoses the 'disease' of materialism and prescribes its antidote, simple living.
An intimate portrait of an ancestral way of life under threat in a world increasingly dominated by large-scale industrial agriculture.
Reconstructs the long-forgotten murder of union organizer Frank Little in Butte, Montana, and draws a connection between the unsolved murder of Little, and the attempted murder of the town itself.
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