Pentecostalism: Massive Global Growth Under the Radar
The Atlas of Pentecostalism project is an expanding record of the fastest growing religion in the world.
The Atlas of Pentecostalism project is an expanding record of the fastest growing religion in the world.
Before feeling the full brunt of rising seas, the Kiribati people eke out a life on narrow ribbons of land exposed to waves, wind and tide. There's no room for retreat surrounded by the Pacific Ocean.
Listen as David Marash interviews Pulitzer Center grantee Jacob Kushner about his reporting in Haiti.
Photojournalist Allison Shelley documented Haiti for a year after the 2010 quake. She went back this month to check on rebuilding progress.
Uncertainty over land ownership has played out across Haiti as the country attempts to attract foreign investment in tourism, mining, manufacturing, and agriculture.
"When We Pray," and other poems by Kwame Dawes from his and Andre Lambertson's reporting investigating the experience of living with HIV/AIDS in the Christian Church in Jamaica.
Allison Shelley's photoessay of reconstruction following Haiti's earthquake.
Foreign aid donors are making progress—and mistakes—but many Haitians say the country's leadership is failing to deliver.
In early December 2013 and early 2014, Kwame Dawes and Andre Lambertson traveled to Jamaica to investigate the experience of people living with HIV/AIDS in the Christian Church.
In the mountainous regions of the Dominican Republic teen pregnancy is everywhere and mothers’ partners are commonly older.
"Mapping Cholera: A Tale of Two Cities" is now available to embed for free, anywhere.
Joanne Silberner discusses her reporting on health-related issues with South Dakota Public Broadcasting.
The Pulitzer Center's interactive website LiveHopeLove.com was chosen as Adobe's Site of the Day for April 5, 2008. The site, designed by bluecadet Interactive, is part of the Pulitzer Center's multimedia reporting project "Hope: Living and Loving with HIV in Jamaica."
This Saturday, December 1, is World AIDS Day, a moment each year for special focus on the epidemic. Two hours away from American shores people face this epidemic daily. The Dominican Republic and Haiti boast the highest rates in this hemisphere of the virus that leads to AIDS. And it is a story that has been overlooked in the American mainstream media.