Interactive Map: Reporting Across Pakistan
Get a reporter's-eye view of Pakistan with a new interactive map.
Although lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgender and intersex people have won greater rights in recent years, the struggle for equality continues in the United States and around the world. Pulitzer Center grantee stories tagged with “LGBTI Rights” cover the continuing efforts of LGBTI activists and their allies to achieve full legal and social equality with heterosexual and cisgender peers. Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on LGBTI rights.
Get a reporter's-eye view of Pakistan with a new interactive map.
The typical image that comes to mind when thinking about Pakistan's trans culture may be of a person on the street—dressed up, makeup done. But what about all the times when they are not begging?
Lesbian, Muslim, out and proud, Jaheda Choudhury-Potter has made a name for herself in British hip-hop.
Bolivia has passed a cutting edge gender identity law to meet the needs of its trans citizens. But President Evo Morales is still making homophobic and misogynistic public statements.
The epicenter of the AIDS epidemic in America is Atlanta and the southeast.
PBS NewsHour launches its series "The End of AIDS?" with a look at prevention efforts in San Francisco.
Damascus and other Syrian cities have seen a decline in number of men.
Grantees Michael Edison Hayden and Sami Siva speak about India's transgender community on Interfaith Voices.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe strongly denounces homosexuality, which starkly contrasts the human rights agenda promoted at the meeting as key to an effective HIV/AIDS response.
A gay soldier in Syria's army speaks about his experience.
In the past four years, the Russian government has systematically engaged in a crackdown on the LGBT community and NGOs, silencing AIDS awareness.
The members of a prominent LGBTI African asylum seekers organization marched in London Pride last Saturday.
We can now envision a post-AIDS world, but marginalized communities are still being left behind. In the global fight against AIDS, business as usual will not end the epidemic.
Stephen Sapienza crafts simple but compelling narratives, chronicling the lives and plights of everyday people, from the cities of Bangladesh to the streets of Sierra Leone, writes Ameto Akpe.