April 2, 2014 / The New York Times
Michael Edison Hayden, Sami Siva

The stigma attached to AIDS patients leads to discrimination in India's state-run hospitals.

March 27, 2014 / The New Republic
Jeffrey E. Stern

The former Johns Hopkins professor could be Afghanistan's next president. And he's willing to do whatever it takes—including selecting a brutal warlord as a running mate.

March 17, 2014 / Foreign Policy
Dimiter Kenarov, Boryana Katsarova

Life imitates art in Crimea, where nothing seems real anymore except the tears and the vodka.

March 13, 2014 / The Los Angeles Times
Kenneth R. Weiss

The garment factory workers toil for paltry wages. But such jobs give Bangladeshi girls a measure of independence in a traditional Muslim society.

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Published and Broadcast

Reports by Pulitzer Center journalists for print, online and broadcast news outlets
April 3, 2014 / Link TV Jim Wickens
In Peru, as many as 10,000 dolphins are slaughtered for shark bait.
April 3, 2014 / The New York Times Michael Edison Hayden
Despite a lack of success in providing adequate healthcare for the poor, Gujarat plans to expand its state health insurance program.
April 1, 2014 / SportWeek Tomaso Clavarino
Competitive sports helped erase the bloody past between Rwanda's Hutu and Tutsi.

Untold Stories

Reports from the field - an exclusive channel of Pulitzer Center reporting
April 3, 2014
Andre Lambertson
Journalist Kwame Dawes explores the shame culture that isolates homosexuals and persons with HIV/AIDS in Jamaica.
April 3, 2014 Caryle Murphy
With technology bringing the outside world in, attitudes toward religion are changing in Saudi Arabia.
April 2, 2014 Anup Kaphle
Lack of opportunities at home has led thousands of young Nepalis to leave the country for low-skill jobs in the wealthy countries of the Persian Gulf.

Projects

Reporting projects commissioned by the Pulitzer Center
Image by Caryle Murphy. Saudi Arabia, 2014.
Caryle Murphy
Saudi Arabia's religious landscape is evolving, posing challenges to the ultraconservative version of Islam on which the kingdom was founded. What will that mean for its future governance?
Image by Sami Siva. India, 2014.
Michael Edison Hayden, Sami Siva
Doctors have demanded fixes to India's public hospitals for years, but have been stifled by mismanagement.
Image by Meera Senthilingam. South Africa, 2014.
Meera Senthilingam
Tuberculosis is the leading cause of death in South Africa. Drug resistance is now so strong that patients are sent home to die. However, new drugs are being made available through trials or NGOs.

Gateways

Gateways contain multiple Pulitzer Center reporting projects that focus on a single issue
The world's oceans are vital to the planet's health—and ours. How is this resource managed now and what are its prospects for the future?
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.

Education

Global Gateway inspires students to become active consumers and producers of news and information
April 4, 2014
Mattathias Schwartz
Meet Pulitzer grantee Mattathias Schwartz, author of the New Yorker article "A Mission Gone Wrong."
April 3, 2014 Allison Shelley, Allyn Gaestel
Allison Shelley and Allyn Gaestel report on the silent crisis of abortion in Nigeria.
April 3, 2014 Beenish Ahmed
Journalist Beenish Ahmed discusses what drove her to report on education in Pakistan and why it's such a vexed and critical question for the future of the country.

Blog

News and views from the Pulitzer Center team
April 3, 2014 Micah Fink
Honors for Pulitzer-supported documentary "The Abominable Crime," directed by Micah Fink.
March 31, 2014 Tom Hundley
Drone warfare—cheap, easy and deadly—is likely to write the next chapter of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
March 24, 2014 Tom Hundley
Politics in Russia has always made for interesting theater, the current crisis in Crimea being no exception.

Campus Consortium

Our Campus Consortium initiative forges dynamic relationships with colleges and universities
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.
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.