07 Jan 2020 - 19 Dec 2021
Stories and field notes produced by Pulitzer Center Reporting Fellows from our Campus Consortium partner universities JULIA KNOERR
In L.A.'s Boyle Heights neighborhood, essential workers are helping low-income, Spanish-speaking seniors manage food insecurity, new technology, and social connection through programs built to last.
ANYA SLEPYAN
A new administration brings potential to address Appalachia’s economic and environmental issues on a wider scale.
MUSINGUZI BLANSHE
To those who have suffered at the hands of Local Defense Units (LDUs) in Uganda, coronavirus has been a threefold pandemic: first, coronavirus itself, but also human rights abuses and lack of justice.
JACK KELLY FOR WISCONSIN WATCH
Some farmer advocates are pushing for supply management systems that could raise milk prices and reduce volatility.
JACK KELLY FOR WISCONSIN WATCH
Many Wisconsin milk producers are overwhelmed, dogged by financial worries, a crushing workload, labor shortages and bad weather.
AISHWARYA AIRY
President-elect Joe Biden will arrive at the White House next week with the smallest military presence in Afghanistan in nearly two decades.
ARIANNE LACHAPELLE HENRY
When women assumed dead or vanished return home in anguish, there's no shortage of Ethiopians helping them, but these heroic efforts remain compromised by widespread stigma and limited resources.
ETHAN EHRENHAFT
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted film festivals and similar events across the globe. Fortunately, many festivals adapted and held hybrid events or online screenings for movie goers.
ARIANNE LACHAPELLE HENRY
Trauma often becomes the beginning and end of one’s journey. Yet, the story continues when you return home after the unfathomable event whether or not it was a good place to begin with.
KELLY CANNON
Cold-chain and two-dose requirements for promising vaccine candidates pose serious challenges for Native American communities without reliable electricity or transportation.
FRANCESCA BENTLEY
Navigating the nuances of American racism is difficult for anyone, and especially so if you are a Black foreigner. In the context of Maine, the whitest state in America, it's even harder.
NATALIE WODNIAK
What does the fight against COVID-19 look like from behind a computer screen? Natalie Wodniak, our 2020 George Washington University Reporting Fellow, reflects on her experience as a public health worker.
“We will illuminate dark places and, with a deep sense of responsibility, interpret these troubled times.” —Joseph Pulitzer III (1913-1993)