August 3, 2013 / Untold Stories
Larry C. Price

Photographer Larry Price often focuses on eyes to catch the essence of a story. In the gold mines of Burkina Faso, he was drawn instead to the hands and feet of working children.

July 24, 2013 / Harper's Magazine
Erik Vance, Dominic Bracco II

The dismal future of the global fishery.

July 26, 2013 / The Washington Post | KidsPost
Kem Knapp Sawyer

Paul Salopek is an adventurer and a dreamer, an old-fashioned trekker and a modern day explorer. He has set out on foot to circle the world, a 21,000 mile journey that will take 7 years to complete.

July 23, 2013 / The Economist
Esha Chhabra

Will the world eradicate polio? If it does, some of the credit may go to a 73-year-old billionaire horse-breeder from the Indian city of Pune.

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Published and Broadcast

Reports by Pulitzer Center journalists for print, online and broadcast news outlets
August 9, 2013 / Al Jazeera Yasmin Bendaas
The last generation of tattooed women in Algeria is fading, but the tradition lives on in other forms.
August 8, 2013 / Le Monde.fr Yves Eudes
In Qaqortoq, a small town in Greenland, the common view is that global warming is the best thing to have ever happened to the region.
August 8, 2013 / Chicago Council on Global Affairs Roger Thurow
Fighting for maternal and infant nutrition by bringing "hidden hunger" into the open. A birth in rural India, and beating the statistical odds of stunting.

Untold Stories

Reports from the field - an exclusive channel of Pulitzer Center reporting
August 9, 2013
Erik Vance
Writer Erik Vance discusses the Seri people and their struggle to maintain control over their fishing grounds.
August 7, 2013 Fernando Rodriguez, Aaron Nelsen
Set against declining fish stock and a controversial fisheries law that awards the largest share to industrial companies, Chile's artisan fisherman worry about the future of their livelihood.
August 7, 2013 Diksha Bali
Cleanliness may be next to godliness, but when it comes to waste management and sanitation, church and state in Ghana are not singing from the same hymnbook.

Projects

Reporting projects commissioned by the Pulitzer Center
Luke Messac
While the debate over health user fees has been raging in international development circles for decades, in Malawi the issue has a longer history, combustible politics, and intense personal relevance...
Kerstin Egenhofer
In Malawi, people are using a deceptively simple strategy to alleviate poverty: giving poor people money and letting them decide how to spend it.
Image by Nick Swyter. Panama, 2013.
Nick Swyter
Panama is confronting its electricity crisis by constructing a major dam near a territory designated for the Ngäbe-Buglé, an indigenous people who believe the dam will threaten their way of life.

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
August 7, 2013
Gregory Gilderman
Gregory Gilderman has reported on heroin addiction in the United States, but found a far more desperate situation in Russia.
August 7, 2013 Esha Chhabra
Reporting on Polio and mHealth in India — Lessons Learned
August 7, 2013 Fred de Sam Lazaro, Simone Ahuja
Journalists Fred de Sam Lazaro and Simone Ahuja discuss their reporting from India.

Blog

News and views from the Pulitzer Center team
August 6, 2013 Jon Sawyer
We are excited to announce that our award-winning e-books, "In Search of Home" and "Voices of Haiti," are now available on Amazon.
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.

Campus Consortium

Our Campus Consortium initiative forges dynamic relationships with colleges and universities
The University of San Diego and its Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies are dedicated to building and sustaining peace and justice.
The collaboration combines Johns Hopkins’ deep bench of top public health experts with the Pulitzer Center’s extensive experience supporting global health reporting for leading news outlets.
Affiliated with State University of New York (SUNY), Westchester Community College continues its tradition as "Veteran Friendly Campus" and offers new Communications & Journalism Innovation Lab.
One of our earliest journalist tours included a University of Miami stop focused on under-told stories from South America. We returned to the University in spring 2012 with "Voices of Haiti."