Malawi: A Cooking Crisis
Framing the challenge of wood fuels in Malawi—a Polaroid series.
Culture rests at the core of how people live their lives and experience the world. Pulitzer Center grantee stories tagged with “Culture” feature reporting that covers knowledge, belief, art, morals, law and customs. Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on culture.
Framing the challenge of wood fuels in Malawi—a Polaroid series.
Religion, not geopolitics, is at the center of how many Egyptians see regional threats.
What does it mean to be “labeled” with a disability in India, and how does that shape your lived experienced, as well as your individuality?
After centuries of East vs. West argument, Russia chooses both.
Egypt's Nile transport has some safety concerns, but if utilized properly it could mean a whole lot more lives (and money) are saved.
Betty Nanozi was robbed of everything she owns, twice. Her cow was beaten to death. Her land was forcefully taken from her. Her child's life was threatened. All because she is a widow in Uganda.
Countries on the fuzzy edge between two continents are grappling with what it means to be in Europe or Asia today.
Outcasts of their culture and sometimes their own families, teenage girls and widows find home and a sense of community at Tarash Mandir in the holy city of Vrindavan.
A group wedding ceremony is held for couples whose unions are culturally or economically challenged. Five of the 15 couples participating include widows.
"A suspicion lingers that the rest of the world may not consider Georgia to be as European as Georgians do."
When there's no therapist, how can citizens in India recover from different forms of depression and mental illness?
It's estimated that about 90 percent of people in India in need of mental health treatment go without. A new program is looking to change that by training locals to be mental health counselors.