Reports from the field - an exclusive channel of Pulitzer Center reporting
August 18, 2011 by Peter Gwin
Mali and Niger wait anxiously to see how their countries will fare if the besieged regime of Muammar Qaddafi falls during civil war.
August 17, 2011
by Stephen Sapienza
Peru's rainforests have been a hot spot for resource extraction even before rubber baron Carlos Fitzcarald first arrived in the Madre de Dios region.
August 17, 2011
by Helen Branswell
Using simple, low-tech methods, Indian public health officials sample sewage in Mumbai, New Delhi and Patna to learn where polioviruses originate and to locate children in need of vaccination.
August 16, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Coleen Jose
Residents living in the Phillippines are beginning to link frequent natural disasters like Typhoon Ketsana in 2009 to environmental degradation in the region.
August 16, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Antigone Barton
Carol Nyirenda’s journey to fight HIV took her around the world, to three continents, in five weeks. Now she has come home again to Lusaka, to organize women living with the epidemic.
August 15, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Hadas Gold
Argentina is in the midst of election season and cartonero cooperatives are trying to join forces to seek recognition from politicians.
August 15, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Stephen Sapienza
As many as 20,000 people are involved in illegal gold mining in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, which has resulted in the destruction of soil and forests as well as the release of toxic mercury.
August 15, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Christiane Badgley
Edlove Quarshie was a passionate advocate for fishermen’s rights in Ghana.
August 15, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Hanna Ingber Win
Roads, buildings, and police posts were destroyed in the Dolakha district of Nepal during the Maoist insurgency. But the area has now begun to show improvements in infrastructure and healthcare.
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August 12, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Coleen Jose
"Old Downtown" Manila in the Philippines is the hub of social and economic activity.
August 12, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Anna Tomasulo
Women who consider themselves feminists in Nepal are often looked down upon because their ideas don't conform with traditional values.
Merja Roivainen, director of the intestinal virus unit at Finland’s National Ins
August 12, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Helen Branswell
Someone in Tampere, Finland, has been excreting stools laced with the poliovirus and flushing them into the sewer system since 2008, threatening eradication campaigns.
August 12, 2011 / Untold Stories
by Sean Gallagher
After China's 1998 logging ban, attention turned to harvesting bamboo. The industry brings in millions of dollars each year for the country's economy.

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