Death - and life - far from home
Pvt. Steven Drees was injured in Afghanistan and evacuated to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany. Most of the organs donated by U.S. soldiers at that hospital go to those who need them the most: Germans.
Pvt. Steven Drees was injured in Afghanistan and evacuated to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany. Most of the organs donated by U.S. soldiers at that hospital go to those who need them the most: Germans.
TB killed 1.7 million individuals in 2009. Are we treating one of the world’s deadliest diseases with the equivalent of “muskets and sticks?
Steven Drees left his hometown of Peshtigo, Wisc. for Afghanistan the day he turned 19.
Who receives the organs donated by U.S. service members who die in Germany?
What happens when women's bodies become instruments for warfare?
You've heard about the role of social media and emergency law in the revolutions proliferating across the Middle East, but what about sex?
President Teodoro Obiang puts a carefully devised public spin on the oil empire fueling his family's lavish lifestyle, while the vast majority of his citizens live in poverty.
The international community ignored the events in Osh, Kyrgyzstan last June and they continue to ignore the threat of war over Nogorno-Karabakh.
Sudanese in the US have been given the opportunity to vote on the referendum for southern secession. They share their hopes and dreams for a new southern Sudan.
Sudan begins voting Sunday on a referendum that will decide whether the South will secede from the North.
Refugee Bill Clinton Hadam finds a comfort zone in elite Olympic training. And his family now includes its first US citizens – newborn twins.
The winners of the Project:Report contest received travel grants to report on an under-reported international story. Their reporting is now underway.
A slideshow presentation of National Geographic reporter Brent Stirton's reporting trip to Timbuktu. Based on an article in the January 2011 issue of National Geographic Magazine.