The Dreamers: Ukrainian Policewomen
Photo essay about women on new Ukrainian police force.
What happens after a long conflict and how is peace maintained amid lingering animosity and grief over the lives lost in war? Pulitzer Center stories tagged with “Peacekeeping” deal with efforts to maintain peace and rebuild nations once wars have ended and rebuilding begins. Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on peacekeeping.
Photo essay about women on new Ukrainian police force.
The town of Shadian was once marketed as the “little Mecca of the East.” But can its residents really practice their religion in peace?
In this radio documentary for Making Contact, Reese Erlich delves into the political and economic impact of Iranian youth on the country's government.
A century after the 1916 Easter Rising, Ireland marks a defining moment in its history with an armed rebellion against imperial rule.
Alan Robock thought his "nuclear winter" research was big news, and in one corner of the the world it was.
WNYC's Jack D'Isidoro and T.J. Raphael report on Nuclear Winter after grantee Kit R. Roane releases a Retro Report documentary for The New York Times on the topic.
The military commander of America’s nuclear arsenal, Admiral Cecil Haney, says the triad's combination of nuclear arms makes it complicated for a would-be enemy to attack the United States.
Filmmaker Fiona Lloyd-Davies remembers Masika, a survivor of multiple rapes, who helped thousands of others in the DRC, where rape was used as a weapon of war.
After nearly two years, it’s time to recognize what can’t be changed and what’s best for the peninsula.
Earlier this year, Ukraine began the process of reforming one of its most oppressive institutions: its police force.
After enduring nuclear-weapons tests in the 20th century and the rise of sea levels today, the people of this low-lying Pacific nation are experts in existentialism.
Bring Jerusalem's Jewish and Palestinian youths together at the YMCA, give them cameras, and what happens?