Reports by Pulitzer Center journalists for print, online and broadcast news outlets
October 15, 2013 / Guernica Alia Malek
A family’s journey from Armenia to Syria and back again.
October 14, 2013 / MinnPost.com
Sharon Schmickle
Women in sub-Saharan Africa provide more than half the farm labor yet are five times less likely than men to own land.
October 14, 2013 / MinnPost.com
Sharon Schmickle
Many African women still struggle for rights — for the right to go to school, to marry when and whom they choose, to own farmland and livestock.
October 11, 2013 / The Wall Street Journal
Sean Gallagher
British photographer Sean Gallagher spent the past seven years casting the spotlight on China's environmental crises.
October 11, 2013 /
Varsha Ramakrishnan
Varsha Ramakrishnan examines the tradition of dowry in India, as well as the related violence that may ensue regardless of a woman's social class.
October 10, 2013 / The New Yorker
Alexis Okeowo
A clash at a Zambian mine reveals the tensions surrounding China’s growing investment in Africa.
October 7, 2013 / The Washington Post
Sharon Schmickle, Finnigan wa Simbeye
Drought-tolerant corn is off-limits to Tanzanian farmers as outside groups debate the best approach for easing hunger across Africa.
October 6, 2013 / Foreign Policy
Jeffrey E. Stern
The fourth in Jeffrey Stern's series of oral histories from Afghans preparing for life after December 2014, when U.S. and NATO combat troops will have left Afghanistan.
October 4, 2013 / Belfer Center | Harvard University
Eben Harrell
Eben Harrell discusses what he learned from his reporting on Plutonium Mountain.
October 3, 2013 / The New York Review of Books
Nicolas Pelham
As multiple forces assert power in different parts of the country, many feel that only a strongman can hold Libya together. But who could it be?
October 2, 2013 / The New York Review of Books
Nicolas Pelham
Qaddafi is gone and Libya is coming apart. As Nicolas Pelham reports here, revolutions are hard to get right.
October 1, 2013 / Thomson Reuters Foundation
Eleanor Klibanoff
At age 16, Ana Luisa was raped. But by seeking an abortion to salvage her life, she became the criminal in the eyes of Salvadoran law, which bans abortion.
September 28, 2013 / Foreign Policy
Jeffrey E. Stern
The third in Jeffrey Stern's series of oral histories from Afghans preparing for life after December 2014, when U.S. and NATO combat troops will have left Afghanistan.

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