November 7, 2012 / Untold Stories
Larry C. Price

As the price of gold increases so too does the exploitation of child labor in the gold mines of the Philippines.

October 30, 2012 / GlobalPost
Jeff Howe, Gary Knight

From Mandalay to Kunming, the central artery between Burma and China reflects an evolving economic and political relationship.

October 5, 2012
Paul Salopek

Students, we want to hear your stories!

October 25, 2012 / Untold Stories
Sean Gallagher

Up to 100,000 nomads have been removed from the highland grasslands of the Tibetan Plateau. Climate change, mining and government policy are causing the rapid disappearance of this unique culture.

« Previous Next »

Published and Broadcast

Reports by Pulitzer Center journalists for print, online and broadcast news outlets
November 6, 2012 / GlobalPost Samuel Loewenberg
Sporadic violence around Kenya is already spurring fears that next year's elections could lead to a repeat of the bloody post-election clashes in 2007-2008.
November 6, 2012 / The Seattle Globalist Sara Shahriari
Marcelino Coila Choque is from a family of fishermen in Peru. From his small village along Lake Titicaca, he has watched the lake's water turn opaque and the fish population plummet.
November 5, 2012 / Fountain Ink Tariq Mir
The jihadi campaign in Kashmir appears to be on its last legs, but it has left behind the troubling legacy of a rising Salafism that is in conflict with the region's centuries-old Sufi tradition.

Untold Stories

Reports from the field - an exclusive channel of Pulitzer Center reporting
November 8, 2012
Stephen Franklin
The number of Syrian refugees crossing the border to Turkey continues to mount as the uprsing in Syria drags on. The crisis is taking a heavy toll in both countries.
November 7, 2012 Robert Marquand
A family’s reverse migration transforms a Polish mountain spa resort as well as the attitudes of local residents.
November 7, 2012 Stephen Franklin
Turkey has cleaned up its human rights record, but activists say abuses still abound.

Projects

Reporting projects commissioned by the Pulitzer Center
Larry C. Price
Tiny children and teens toil in the gold mines of the Philippines. It is very risky business, sometimes deadly. But child labor is growing as families rush to exploit the worldwide craze for gold.
Gary Knight, Jeff Howe
The geopolitics of Southeast Asia are shifting rapidly and China's influence can be seen in the shipping routes along the Mekong--and in the soft power it exercises in countries such as Burma.
Céline Rouzet
Is Exxon Mobil's natural gas project a heaven-sent opportunity to boost Papua New Guinea’s GDP, or a threat to the 60,000 people who can claim "customary ownership" of the land that will be affected?

Gateways

Gateways contain multiple Pulitzer Center reporting projects that focus on a single issue
Pulitzer Center journalists examine emerging nuclear threats, from an alarming new arms race between India and Pakistan to the competition between the U.S. and Russia on nuclear exports.
A collaborative investigation into the water sector in Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Liberia in partnership with local journalists and their outlets.
From the gold in our jewelry to the shrimp at our favorite restaurant and the minerals within our electronics, the true cost of production—both social and environmental—too often remains hidden.

Education

Global Gateway inspires students to become active consumers and producers of news and information
November 5, 2012
Austin Merrill
Journalist Austin Merrill describes his history with Ivory Coast, why he chose to return, and some of the unfortunate surprises he found as he reported on the country's uneasy post-war status.
October 31, 2012 Stephen Sapienza
Do you know who processed your shrimp? Steve Sapienza's most recent project explores labor exploitation in the Thai shrimp industry.
October 24, 2012 Samuel Loewenberg
Pulitzer Center grantee Sam Loewenberg discusses his reporting on chronic hunger and the causes behind it.

Blog

News and views from the Pulitzer Center team
November 8, 2012
The Pulitzer Center is looking for photos of tobacco advertising in Chinese schools as part of a series on cancer in the developing world, produced with the BBC World Service. Submit your photo today...
November 6, 2012 Meghan Dhaliwal
Journalists Sushma Subramanian and Deborah Jian Lee honored by the Newswomen's Club of New York for Pulitzer Center-supported reporting in China.
November 5, 2012 Paul Salopek
University of Chicago trustee Jack Fuller has a conversation with two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and National Geographic Fellow Paul Salopek.

Campus Consortium

Our Campus Consortium initiative forges dynamic relationships with colleges and universities
South Dakota State University continues its tradition as a land-grant university and offers a vigorous media studies program with its Department of Journalism and Mass Communication.
University of Chicago's impact on American higher education is legendary - from development of the four-quarter system to the first executive MBA program.
Boston University is one of the Consortium partners that has experimented with diverse ways of linking Pulitzer Center journalists with BU students, faculty and the broader community.
William & Mary, the second oldest college in the nation, embarked on a Campus Consortium partnership with the Pulitzer Center that serves as an example for others.