Child Labor Trafficking: The Work of NGOs in Bangalore and Hyderabad
International Labor Organization estimates 5.8 million children in India work under poor conditions. Many of them are victims of labor trafficking.
International Labor Organization estimates 5.8 million children in India work under poor conditions. Many of them are victims of labor trafficking.
India is the world's second largest producer of leather and leather goods—the toxic working conditions and environmental effects are beyond measure.
What does it mean to be “labeled” with a disability in India, and how does that shape your lived experienced, as well as your individuality?
Outcasts of their culture and sometimes their own families, teenage girls and widows find home and a sense of community at Tarash Mandir in the holy city of Vrindavan.
A group wedding ceremony is held for couples whose unions are culturally or economically challenged. Five of the 15 couples participating include widows.
When there's no therapist, how can citizens in India recover from different forms of depression and mental illness?
It's estimated that about 90 percent of people in India in need of mental health treatment go without. A new program is looking to change that by training locals to be mental health counselors.
Mental illnesses hit rich and poor alike, all around the world. In India, there's also a revolutionary and successful approach to treatment that was abandoned in the US decades ago.
In some cultures, the death of a husband has meant exile, vulnerability, and abuse. But bereaved women are beginning to fight back.
Pulitzer Center launches its newest e-book: To End Aids featuring stories, photographs and video by our grantees. Also included: a timeline, interactive maps, a glossary, and resources.
What is the best time to talk about a company's impact? Dipali Patwa founded a clothing brand that uses organic cotton and artisan-based crafts. Impact, she says, is often misused.
Conventional textile manufacturing is tough on both the people who work in it and their land. But a new crop of entrepreneurs are looking to change that harsh reality.