Saudi Arabia's Shifting Islamic Landscape
With technology bringing the outside world in, attitudes toward religion are changing in Saudi Arabia.
With technology bringing the outside world in, attitudes toward religion are changing in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia is in the throes of far-reaching transformation. Will it destroy a partnership with the United States?
Pulitzer Center's Marvin Kalb discusses how Israel and Palestine could make inroads towards what has long been considered the ultimate pipe dream: peace in the Middle East.
Katherine Zoepf discusses her reporting on Saudi Arabian "Shopgirls" with Here & Now’s Meghna Chakrabarti.
Saudi Arabia is the only country in the world where women are not allowed to drive. However, as more women enter the workforce, transportation is becoming a major issue.
A new sight in Saudi Arabia: women working as shopgirls.
Selling lingerie in Saudi Arabia and the stirrings of a quiet revolution.
Arguments against women driving in Saudi Arabia include that it may damage women's ovaries. But that isn't stopping women from organizing petitions, "drives" and dinners to fight back against the law.
Pulitzer Center grantee Paul Salopek was featured on NPR's On the Media August 16, 2013.
Saudi Arabia exports Salafist Islam to divided Kashmir.
Why didn't the Arab Spring spread to the United Arab Emirates? Simple answer: Life is good.
A wave of young Saudis are graduating and looking to move into the job market, but most cannot find work--a struggle reflected in the country's 40 percent unemployment rate.