Pulitzer Center Update

This Week: Family Divided at the Border

Mario, who did not want to release his last name, outside the Casa Vides Annunciation House immigrant shelter in El Paso on Monday, June 25, 2018. Image by Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The Texas Tribune. United States, 2018.

Mario, who did not want to release his last name, outside the Casa Vides Annunciation House immigrant shelter in El Paso on Monday, June 25, 2018. Image by Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The Texas Tribune. United States, 2018. 

Migrant Families on a Troubled Border
Texas Tribune Staff

The Texas Tribune continues its intensive coverage of the crisis along the U.S.-Mexican border. Reporters look at how immigrant parents are dealing with separation from their young children, and also examine how the Trump administration is responding (or not) to public pressure over its policies. “I know that she's been traumatized, a 6-year-old girl, and she's never been separated from us,” says one mother. Other coverage tracks the daily advances, setbacks, and uncertainties of a chaotic situation. All of The Tribune’s reporting on this topic is collected here under the heading Families Divided.

Water crisis in Cape Town. CC BY-SA 2.0. South Africa, 2018.

Water crisis in Cape Town. CC BY-SA 2.0. South Africa, 2018. 

Water Panic in a Major Global City
Brett Walton

“Day Zero” was avoided, but Cape Town had to take severe measures to keep the taps flowing. For Circle of Blue, Brett Walton examines a crisis that is likely to afflict more and more cities around the world.

Munni bi lies on her bed outside her house in Annu Nagar. Image by Raj Sarma. India, 2018.

Munni bi lies on her bed outside her house in Annu Nagar. Image by Raj Sarma. India, 2018.

Catastrophe Without End
Apoorva Mandavilli

On December 3, 1984, 40 tons of toxic gas spewed from a factory in Bhopal, India, becoming the world’s deadliest industrial disaster. Thirty-four years later, reports Apoorva Mandavilli for The Atlantic, the tragedy continues.