How We Did Data Journalism (With Little Data)
Olivia Sohr started her investigation with one idea: report on irregular settlements in the Greater Buenos Aires. But the data took her to social housing in the City.
Olivia Sohr started her investigation with one idea: report on irregular settlements in the Greater Buenos Aires. But the data took her to social housing in the City.
Science magazine and PBS NewsHour have teamed up to cover HIV/AIDS in Russia for broadcast and print stories, which requires constant juggling of the distinct reporting needs of print and TV.
Reporter Jon Cohen quickly learned just how differently time runs in Nigeria.
Argentina Maria-Vanderhorst shares a few observations on traveling to China to report on why Chinese women are having fewer children.
Multimedia geojournalism collaboration uses cutting-edge technology to expose uncharted territory.
How did Robert Mugabe's rule end? With a mysterious poisoning, a clandestine flight across the border, a standoff at the airport, and a furious shootout in a Harare suburb. Here's the whole story.
A look into the life of one of El Salvador's most reviled figures from the civil war and the legacy he left behind.
Pursuing an interview with former President of El Salvador Alfredo Cristiani.
Hurricane Harvey had help from sand miners, Vince Beiser reports.
Japan has the largest percentage of older people in the world, with 27.3 percent of their citizens 65 and older. It has turned to technologies from VR to robotics to solve challenges of super-aging.
In Bolivia, hundreds of children live behind bars with their imprisoned parents. "Jail is not the best place to grow up," a government official told reporters, but at least families stay together.
Zulma Corhuari, 16, stepped out for a moment to get an aspirin for her headache. Her family never saw her again. Her brother Victor is desperate and suspects the worst. "There's no justice," he said.