January 29, 2015

NEW: Play the version update of 'TB2: Mali's Ancient Manuscripts'!

January 25, 2015 / Al Jazeera America
Sim Chi Yin, Ian Johnson

Former bomb shelters and dank basements are now home to hundreds of thousands of rural migrants seeking to forge a new life in China's booming capital.

January 12, 2015 / GlobalPost
Jacob Kushner, Allison Shelley

Foreign aid donors are making progress—and mistakes—but many Haitians say the country's leadership is failing to deliver.

January 6, 2015 / VQR
Dimiter Kenarov, Boryana Katsarova

Two performances seem to be taking place in parallel: one inside the theater with actors, and another in the streets outside with soldiers in green balaclavas and no recognizable insignia.

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Published and Broadcast

Reports by Pulitzer Center journalists for print, online and broadcast news outlets
February 4, 2015 / Santa Fe Public Radio 101.1 FM Jacob Kushner, Allison Shelley
Listen as David Marash interviews Pulitzer Center grantee Jacob Kushner about his reporting in Haiti.
February 3, 2015 / Foreign Policy Tom Hundley
The world's most pressing public health crisis isn't AIDS or Ebola or malaria—it's a soaring number of motorcycle fatalities. And it's costing developing countries billions.
January 30, 2015 / National Geographic Amy Maxmen
To stop infected bodies from spreading the disease in Sierra Leone, health officials persuaded local leaders to change how villagers mourned.

Untold Stories

Reports from the field - an exclusive channel of Pulitzer Center reporting
February 5, 2015
Brian Castner
On her first ever deployment, Julia Hollingsworth saw a country that looked a lot like her birthplace of Trinidad.
January 26, 2015 Michelle Ferng
In Peru, many older adults face discrimination and maltreatment, yet the phenomenon remains largely hidden. In this video, two older adults tell their stories.
January 26, 2015 Jessie Li
At the Guangzhou School for the Blind, the principal is seeking more diverse job training.

Projects

Reporting projects commissioned by the Pulitzer Center
Image by Kenneth R. Weiss. Kiribati, 2014.
Kenneth R. Weiss
As the low-lying island nation of Kiribati edges closer to a climate change end game, what will happen to its people, its territory, its sovereignty?
Sim Chi Yin, Ian Johnson
Living beneath Beijing's skyscrapers and residential blocks are an estimated 1 million migrant workers. Dubbed the "Rat Tribe", these low-wage workers make a home in windowless basement cubicles.
Image by Allison Shelley. Haiti, 2015.
Allison Shelley
Canaan, a patch of scrubby hillside just outside of Haiti’s capital, has become home to almost 100,000 displaced residents. But is it destined to be a promised land or the country’s biggest slum?

Gateways

Gateways contain multiple Pulitzer Center reporting projects that focus on a single issue
The HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean Gateway examines the impact of the disease across the Caribbean. The reporting in this Gateway uses articles, photography, videos, as well as original poetry and music,...
This Gateway provides compelling material related to the role of women in society and the impact of industrialization and international development on women, children, and families.
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?

Education

Global Gateway inspires students to become active consumers and producers of news and information
December 31, 2014
Nick Miroff
Nick Miroff and Gabe Silverman of The Washington Post travel to Colombia to investigate the palm oil industry's rise through a decades-long civil war.
December 24, 2014 Alice Su
Journalist Alice Su discusses her project "Interim Lives: Refugee Survival in Jordan and Lebanon."
December 12, 2014 Lynn Hicks, Rodney White
In a seven-part interactive series for the Des Moines Register, Pulitzer Center grantees Lynn Hicks and Rodney White look at a quiet revolution that is taking place in China.

Blog

News and views from the Pulitzer Center team
February 4, 2015 Lauren Shepherd, Jon Sawyer
Executive Director Jon Sawyer and Contributing Editor Kem Knapp Sawyer speak about how the Pulitzer Center is evolving in today's media landscape.
February 3, 2015 Tom Hundley, Katherine Doyle
With our new educational game, travel to the historic city of Timbuktu, Mali, where you report on the ancient manuscripts housed there.
January 29, 2015 Quinn Libson, Steve Ringman
Photojournalist Steve Ringman spent ten days aboard a crab-fishing vessel in the Bering Sea to document an industry threatened by ocean acidification.

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.
The University of San Diego and its Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies are dedicated to building and sustaining peace and justice.
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.
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.