News and views from the Pulitzer Center team
July 30, 2013 Tom Hundley
Global warming, pollution and overfishing are killing the world’s oceans. Pulitzer Center grantees Erik Vance and Dominic Bracco II take us to the Sea of Cortez.
July 30, 2013
Gaby Spangenberg
John Schmid, Mike De Sisti take home APME honors for their series in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel about Chinese competition and the Wisconsin paper industry.
July 30, 2013
Marvin Kalb, Caroline D'Angelo
Senior advisor Marvin Kalb speaks at Politics and Prose about his new book, "The Road to War." Watch excerpts here.
July 26, 2013
Rebecca Gibian
Presidential election in Mali an important turning point for a traditionally democratic country struggling to recover from a military coup and an Islamist insurgency.
July 24, 2013
Tom Hundley
Small class-sizes are great — if you happen to live in a wealthy country like the United States. In India, it's a different story.
July 22, 2013
Caroline D'Angelo
Our award-winning iPad e-books are free this week for the Building Learning Communities education conference. Get your copy today.
July 22, 2013
Gaby Spangenberg, Joanne Silberner
Joanne Silberner receives 2013 European School of Oncology's Best Cancer Reporter Award along with British journalist.
July 18, 2013
Lauren E. Bohn
Grantee Lauren Bohn offers her take on the post-Morsi turmoil in Egypt.
July 16, 2013
Gaby Spangenberg, Micah Fink
"The Abominable Crime" scores honors, audience at Belize International Film Festival.
July 15, 2013
Tom Hundley
Over the last two decades, Burkina Faso has emerged as Africa’s fourth largest exporter of gold, creating an ever-expanding army of child laborers.
July 9, 2013
Caroline D'Angelo
Kirkus Reviews awards a star to our enhanced e-book for iPad, "Voices of Haiti." Get your copy today.
July 8, 2013
Tom Hundley
The best journalism takes time — time to report, time to write. We urge you to take time to read two examples of long-form magazine journalism of the highest order.
July 6, 2013
Jon Sawyer
In Malaysia British filmmaker Callum Macrae's four-year fight for accountability on alleged Sri Lanka war crimes raises a new issue: the public's right to see a controversial film.

Pages