Pulitzer Center Update

This Week: When a Big American Corporation Abandons Your Country

Georga Burger in the one room house in New Ganze, Suriname she was relocated to when her village was flooded to provide water for the Afobaka Dam. Burger left with her children as the water rose around her old house, leaving many of her belongings and animals. Image by Stephanie Strasburg. Suriname, 2017.

Georga Burger in the one room house in New Ganze, Suriname she was relocated to when her village was flooded to provide water for the Afobaka Dam. Burger left with her children as the water rose around her old house, leaving many of her belongings and animals. Image by Stephanie Strasburg. Suriname, 2017.

Good Times End for a Corporate Colony

Rich Lord, Len Boselovic and Stephanie Strasburg

Alcoa, the Pittsburgh-based aluminum giant, spent a century extracting bauxite from Suriname, propelling a plantation economy into the industrial age. Alcoa’s mining operations brought American and Dutch managers, Creole construction workers, indentured laborers from Indonesia and even a few escaped French convicts to the South American country. Its ships carried bauxite to Japan, Europe, and Alabama. Now Alcoa is exiting Suriname, and as grantees Rich Lord, Len Boselovic and Stephanie Strasburg report in their series, it has plunged the country's economy deep into crisis.

The Lady Who Would Lead La France

Sarah Wildman

First Brexit. Then Trump. Now Le Pen? Grantee Sarah Wildman, writing for Vox, takes a look at Marine Le Pen, the French elections, and the global impact of populism, nativism and Islamophobia.

From Riches to Rags

Peter Gwin

Grantee Peter Gwin explains how the Central African Republic, a country blessed with deep reserves of diamonds and gold, forests thick with timber, and rich deposits of uranium and petroleum, remains one of the world’s poorest places.