Palestinian Village and Israeli Settlement Share the Same Name But Not Much Else
With limited resources and threatened by settler violence, Palestinian herding families living in the South Hebron Hills are struggling to survive.
Foreign aid can take many forms, from financial aid for economic development to medical and military assistance. Pulitzer Center grantee stories tagged with “Aid” cover the full spectrum of international aid given to countries and people in need. Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on aid.
With limited resources and threatened by settler violence, Palestinian herding families living in the South Hebron Hills are struggling to survive.
Jordan hosts refugees from not only Syria but also Iraq, Sudan, Somalia, Palestine and more. Most of these refugees are in cities, not camps, and stay not for days, but years. How will Jordan respond?
Jordan’s real crisis is not the threat of encroaching extremism, but the grinding weight of hosting victims from the region’s various humanitarian emergencies. How much longer can the Kingdom last?
The third and final broadcast in PRI's The World series on India’s Midday Meal, the program that feeds 120 million poor and malnourished children.
South Africa faces an increasing battle against drug-resistant tuberculosis and reducing transmission is becoming a key component of disease control. This slideshow explores the problem in Cape Town.
When it comes to treating TB in Vietnam, it does not much good to only meet the funding gaps halfway.
Jordan hosts 29,000 Iraqi refugees, new and old. As media attention shifts to the huge Syrian influx, Iraqis spend months or years limbo, struggling to get by without assistance.
Children in the DRC who have lost families, homes and schools prove to be remarkably resilient. Photographs, videos, and in-depth profiles bring their stories alive.
In Guatemala, a country where nearly half of the children are so malnourished they're "stunted," a new initiative by the nation's top leaders has many feeling hopeful for the first time in years.
Defeating malnutrition in Guatemala, Central America's most populous country.
Extraordinary gains have been made in reducing under-five child mortality, but millions still die every year. The remarkable progress made is proof that more can—and should—be done.
Contraception delivered through female community health workers has helped reduce birthrates and infant mortality.