Half a Century After Their Deportation, Chagossians Employ Football and Community as Tools of Resistance
The Chagos Islands National Football Team is a space of belonging for a group that has faced political, economic, and social exclusion.
The Chagos Islands National Football Team is a space of belonging for a group that has faced political, economic, and social exclusion.
People from all walks of life have come together for a single goal. With their work, they hope to offer a model for support and base-building to protect the environment.
David Bruck, described as a pioneer in the community of death penalty defense lawyers, has represented a white supremacist, the Boston Marathon bomber and a woman who drowned her young children.
Detailed studies of past epidemics show a repeating pattern: Infectious diseases more easily take hold in groups with pre-existing illnesses and who must live in crowded conditions. A similar trend is evident with COVID-19 devastating many minority communities, as recent data revealed.
With a vaccine for the novel coronavirus still likely a year or more away, the first weapon against the virus could be one of the drugs now in clinical trials with COVID-19 patients.
Mass vaccination campaigns against a host of diseases are already grinding to a halt in many countries.
A month into the pandemic that has transformed American life, Callahan, the 130-year-old church’s first female pastor, is navigating how the crisis is transforming the worship experience for her membership.
During the coronavirus pandemic in March 2020, New York City stood still. While capturing some b-roll safely from her car, American University Reporting Fellow alum Erin McGoff noticed something fascinating while reviewing her footage: the sound, or rather, the lack thereof.
The head of the World Health Organization today gave an impassioned but indirect rejoinder to recent comments from U.S. President Donald Trump criticizing WHO’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
Social scientists are examining how the coronavirus pandemic is affecting everything from people’s behavior to the economy.
Many people will likely deal with lingering effects of the coronavirus—and of the emergency treatments that allowed them to survive it.
Columbia Graduate School of Journalism student TuAnh Dam speaks to an ER doctor about her battle against COVID-19.
Pulitzer Center Executive Director Jon Sawyer delivered the 2011 James C. Millstone Memorial Lecture, titled "Bringing Stories Home: New Approaches to Covering the World."
Pulitzer Center-grantee and photographer Peter DiCampo contributed photography, testimony from survivors and his reporting to the Human Rights Watch report on Ivory Coast.
Tom Hundley recaps the Pulitzer Center's week, highlighting a new series of Untold Stories from grantee Jenna Krajeski who is reporting on Kurdish youngsters jailed on harsh anti-terrorism laws.
The Pulitzer Center-supported documentary "Easy Like Water" receives MacArthur Documentary Film Grant Award. The film is one of eight selected out of nearly 400 proposals.
Pulitzer Center congratulates Paul Franz for winning Online News Association Best Student Online Video Award
Actor Gael García Bernal was in Washington to receive an award and speak on behalf of Central America's voiceless migrants.
Elmhurst College and the Pulitzer Center embark on a partnership to promote new approaches in international journalism.
Tom Hundley highlights recent Pulitzer Center reports that touch on different, yet eye-opening, perspectives on 9/11.
More than 80 protesters gathered in front of the White House on August 25 to rally against the proposed construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.
Mark Schulte joins the Pulitzer Center staff as National Education Coordinator.
Daniel Connolly has received an honorable mention in the APME International Perspective contest for his Pulitzer Center-supported series "Blood Trade."
The Pulitzer Center's collection of reporting on water and sanitation, Downstream, is recognized by the Society of Professional Journalists.