Snapshots from Jordan, a Country of Refugees
Take a peek into Jordan as it scrambles to devise ways to help more than half a million Syrian migrants fleeing from conflict.
Take a peek into Jordan as it scrambles to devise ways to help more than half a million Syrian migrants fleeing from conflict.
Aid organizations have been taking a nimble approach to cut through the fog of war.
Syria was once home to a robust, highly educated middle class.
Refugees coming to Germany bring with them vastly different ideas about religion. Now, their relationship with their faith is being shaped once again in their new country.
In a bombed-out husk of a building on the outskirts of Tabqa, Gayle Lemmon met a family trying to wait out the hell of life under ISIS in Raqqa and the war for its liberation.
Less rain and higher temperatures mean herders in Algeria are increasingly struggling to make ends meet.
As U.S. awaits Trump’s decision on the Iran nuclear deal, how do Iranians feel about it?
Expat men are using dating apps to approach women for casual sex, while women pay the price for accepting their advances.
The Kurdish independence referendum on September 25, 2017 was met with pockets of violence.
For migrant workers, failing to pay off loans can mean jail time and loss of income.
In the background of September's independence referendum, the fate of persecuted groups like the Shabak hangs in the balance.
Anxiety surrounds a Kurdish independence referendum. The Kurdistan Regional Government shows no sign of postponing the vote. Young Kurds find themselves excited and worried.
PBS NewsHour's Hari Sreenivasan sat down with Paul Salopek to discuss his upcoming 21,000-mile, seven-year hike across the globe.
Visit the PBS NewsHour site to see the original posting.
Guardian/Observer Calls Paul Salopek Out of Eden project the "most arduous piece of reportage ever undertaken."
This Week in Review: Cancer Not Only for the Rich
This Week in Review: Inside Burma
Pulitzer Center Senior Editor Tom Hundley highlights this week's reporting on Brazil's "Brain Gain," and the role of young tech-savvy entrepreneurs in Egypt's troubled economy.
Pulitzer Center grantee Reese Erlich receives award for his reporting in Syria.
Pulitzer Center Senior Editor Tom Hundley highlights this week's reporting from the ground up in Afghanistan and Iraqi Kurdistan.
Paul Salopek is about to begin a seven-year walk around the world--what would you like to ask him?
Pulitzer Center Senior Editor Tom Hundley highlights this week's reporting, from nuclear-powered icebreakers in Russia to trampled human rights in Turkey.
Pulitzer Center Executive Director Jon Sawyer highlights this week's reporting, from nuclear competition in South Asia to female suicide bombers in the North Caucasus.
The Pulitzer Center launches its partnership with South Dakota's largest university, South Dakota State University, with a lecture by Reese Erlich on the "Arab Spring from Syria to Egypt and Gaza."
Pulitzer Center Senior Editor Tom Hundley highlights this week's reporting from Afghanistan to Haiti.