January 14, 2013 / CNN
Shiho Fukada
Pulitzer Center grantee Shiho Fukada has been covering Japan's economic crisis and its struggling workers.
January 7, 2013 /
Jennifer McDonald
Pulitzer Center journalist Jason Motlagh discusses his reporting with over 1,000 students in Philadelphia and Chicago.
January 7, 2013 / NPR
John Schmid
The paper industry once employed thousands of people across the state of Wisconsin. Now, mills are closing.
January 3, 2013
Jennifer McDonald
Intersection of health and human rights key for first Campus Consortium student reporting fellow from Boston University.
January 2, 2013 / Foreign Policy
Matthieu Aikins
A reporter crosses the treacherous Pakistan-Afghanistan border by truck.
January 2, 2013
Matthieu Aikins
Ten years of the US-led war in Afghanistan has drastically transformed Pakistan’s trucking industry. Matthieu Aikins explores how NATO’s supply lines have brought the borderlands to the big city.
December 30, 2012
Beenish Ahmed
Pakistan is home to more out-of-school children than almost any country in the world. And there's more than just the Taliban keeping the country’s young people from an education.
December 29, 2012
Jon Sawyer
Week in Review: Pulitzer 2012 in Photos
December 28, 2012 / Untold Stories
Kathleen E. McLaughlin
China issues an official denial to Guardian series on counterfeit drugs--but doesn't address the scientific research linking China to fake and substandard drugs that now flood Africa.
December 23, 2012
Meghan Dhaliwal, Caroline D'Angelo
The Pulitzer Center staff share their favorite photos from 2012.
December 22, 2012 / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Mike De Sisti, John Schmid
In Kunshan, German machine maker Voith GmbH has built a sprawling campus of assembly buildings, each the size of an airplane hangar -- an operation dubbed “Paper City” that continues to grow.
December 21, 2012
Kathleen E. McLaughlin
Today China focuses much of its foreign aid on healthcare in the developing world. It has achieved some success but also brought problems.
December 18, 2012 / The Daily Beast
Anna Nemtsova
Looking for new ways to save their souls, Russians flock to self-proclaimed dieties of the frozen north and wait for the end.

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