Reports by Pulitzer Center journalists for print, online and broadcast news outlets
October 4, 2012 / Al Jazeera Jason Motlagh, Stephen Sapienza
Deep in the wilds of northern Burma's Kachin state a brutal civil war has intensified over the past year between government forces and the Kachin Independence Army.
October 2, 2012 / Time
Mujib Mashal
Saleem Khan Rody is governor of one of the most strategic spots in Afghanistan. He has attracted major projects, including a $75 million investment in a power plant. The Taliban are out to stop him.
September 28, 2012 / PRI's The World
Dan Grossman
The farmers of Nueva Esperanza, on the outskirts of Lima, Peru, are growing crops in the desert by using giant mesh nets to harvest droplets of water from fog.
August 15, 2012 / Guernica
Jacob Kushner
Riches beckon from beneath Haiti’s hills, and mining companies are hoping to lock in huge tax breaks to get at them.
August 13, 2012 / The Daily Beast
Anna Nemtsova
Palaces of top officials are popping up on pristine public land along the Black Sea coast. They are viewed as stark reminders of corruption and inequality in Russia.
August 13, 2012 / Foreign Policy
Anna Badkhen
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, PTSD, has become the signature injury of America's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But what about the people who live in those places. Can an entire country have PTSD?
August 13, 2012 / CBC News
Mellissa Fung
Local Panamanians have doubts about a giant Canadian-owned copper mine.
August 10, 2012 / Foreign Policy
Tom Hundley
The U.S. opened the door to nuclear trade with India -- and got nothing.
August 10, 2012 / In These Times
Stephen Franklin
Turkish journalists face an unexpected constraint--abuse from their own democratic government.
August 9, 2012 / Bloomberg Businessweek
Peter DiCampo, Austin Merrill
A photographic tour of "Everyday Africa" captured through the lens of an iPhone.
August 3, 2012 / Global Post
Tim Rogers
As former contra collaborators reorganize in Miami, rumors of guerrilla rearmament are stirring old ghosts in Nicaragua.
July 30, 2012 / The Times of India
Rema Nagarajan
Can healthcare be a fundamental right provided free of cost to all citizens? The developing world looks to the Brazilian model. Can Brazil pull it off?
July 26, 2012 / In These Times
Stephen Franklin
Syrians, many who have been tortured, escape to Turkey. In crowded clinics they struggle to make room for one another. Meanwhile Syrian refugee lawyers compile an account of abuses.

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