Covering Conflict and Corruption, Journalists Face Rising Threat of Violence and Imprisonment
Pulitzer Center Board Member David Rohde discusses the threats that journalists working internationally face.
Pulitzer Center Board Member David Rohde discusses the threats that journalists working internationally face.
In the Philippines, people desperate to make a living dive into the muddy waters of makeshift mines in search of gold.
Photojournalist and Pulitzer Center grantee Larry Price documents the almost unimaginable dangers of compressor mining in the Philippines. A broadcast report airs on the PBS NewsHour.
Gwen Ifill talks with Jon Sawyer about the end of an armed rebellion in eastern Congo--and what it means for the security overall of that long-troubled region.
Democratic Republic of Congo is home to the longest-running conflict in Africa. But after decades of battles and more than five million deaths, UN peacekeeping forces are bolstered by a new mandate.
Environmentalists believe thousands of dolphins are killed and used as bait for sharks.
PBS NewsHour's Ray Suarez narrates the first of three reports on climate change in the Arctic region, focusing on crabs in Alaska's Bering Sea.
Marvin Kalb discusses his newest book "The Road to War: Presidential Commitments Honored and Betrayed" with Ray Suarez on PBS Newshour.
Aboriginal children are getting the opportunity to go to school thanks to the Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences, an alternative education system in rural India that mixes learning with sports.
Photojournalist Larry C. Price captures the long workday of 9-year-old Karim Sawadogo.
A gold rush has brought new opportunities, and challenges, to the desperately poor nation of Burkina Faso in West Africa.
Gold production has more than doubled in Burkina Faso in recent years. However, that boom has led to an increase of child laborers working in cramped and dangerousl mining conditions.