A New York Emergency Room Doctor on the Frontlines
Columbia Graduate School of Journalism student TuAnh Dam speaks to an ER doctor about her battle against COVID-19.
Columbia Graduate School of Journalism student TuAnh Dam speaks to an ER doctor about her battle against COVID-19.
The emergency authorization of malaria drugs for use towards fighting coronavirus has received backlash from former FDA executives.
To understand the true extent of the new coronavirus, researchers across the United States are examining donated blood.
Peter Slevin, associate professor of journalism at Campus Consortium partner Medill School of Journalism, details Illinois' struggle to fight coronavirus with an "inadequate" federal response.
Many websites are tracking the disease and death caused by the coronavirus. But one of the earliest, an online dashboard run by Johns Hopkins University, has become the go-to place for the latest data on coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
Reporting Fellow alum Praveena Somasundaram from Guilford College explores how UNC students are grappling with whether or not to go home to immunocompromised family members.
An in-jail, peer-to-peer program aimed at tackling addiction sees progress in Virginia.
A tale of dogs rescued from the streets and fields of Puerto Rico and the people who spend their days finding medical aid and new homes for them.
The Caregiver Tech Tool Finder recommends the best mobile apps, websites, and devices aimed at patients with dementia and their caregivers.
Historically associated with counterculture movements such as feminism and environmentalism, neopaganism is becoming much more common.
Scientists have come up with a way for you to hear the coronavirus.
The war court where the men accused of plotting the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks are on trial operates under classification rules that are inconsistent, complex and sometimes absurd.
Pulitzer Center education director Mark Schulte highlights a photography contest and digital storytelling competition for middle and high school students.
This Week in Review: China and Wisconsin: Paper Cuts
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."
The Pulitzer Center education team, and journalist grantees, presented reporting on water and sanitation, resource extraction, and gender imbalance to students in London, Paris, and Berlin.
At a George Washington University panel experts discuss how social media tools can help prevent violence against women .
The Trans-Border Institute at the University of San Diego's Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies invites students to submit entries to the Re-Imagining Borders Photography Contest.
Pulitzer Center photographers discuss their reporting projects on commodities from around the world at George Washington University.
Pulitzer Center photojournalists spread out across Washington, DC, to showcase their work on the local costs of global goods.
This Week in Review: Global Goods, Local Costs
The Pulitzer Center takes a look at Elon University's impressive international web-based interactive journalism projects.
Panel discussion at the Woodrow Wilson Center with Kenneth Weiss of the LA Times, Pulitzer Center's Tom Hundley and Ohio University's Geoffrey Dabelko on the impacts of population growth.