It was a BBC4 programme about a scheme to teach women from poor countries how to make solar lights. It was uplifting and dangerous in equal measures.
On one level it was giving the women the ability to start up small scale production of solar panels and lighting from parts shipped in. They were more assembly Queens than real technicians, but still, it gave them opportunities.
On the other level it was creating friction within families where the prevailing culture was paternalistic - women had their place. One Jordanian woman's family broke up and she had to leave the home with her four children and start again.
It looked like a good idea, but the law of unitended consequencies kicked in.