May 4, 2012 /
Tom Hundley
Pulitzer Center Senior Editor Tom Hundley highlights this week's reporting on the military coup in Mali's capital, Bamako and the feature on the families of China's migrant factory workers.
May 4, 2012 / Foreign Policy
Deborah Jian Lee, Sushma Subramanian
The high cost of China's economic miracle: A generation of children left behind when parents work in factories hundreds of miles from home.
May 4, 2012 / Untold Stories
James Whitlow Delano
Chinese families are migrating to Suriname in large numbers—incurring debts, working for low wages. Will this new trend and their indentured labor signal a shift in the Americas' balance of power?
May 2, 2012 /
Peter Chilson
Europeans drew Africa’s borders long ago. Today these lines are often deserted and sometimes dangerous. Mali is the legacy: A crumbling state, rump of ancient empire between desert and forest.
May 2, 2012 /
Jennifer McDonald, Jen Marlowe
Materials for teachers and students ahead of filmmaker Jen Marlowe's visit.
April 24, 2012 / Untold Stories
Greg Constantine
The Rohingya flee human rights abuses in Burma, only to be denied refugee status in Bangladesh.
April 13, 2012 / Untold Stories
Daniel Connolly
A federal trial in Memphis connects a local crime to the international drug trade.
March 31, 2012 / Christian Science Monitor
Sara Shahriari, Noah Friedman-Rudovsky
The booming urban populations of Bolivia and Peru are threatening Lake Titicaca, as well as the indigenous populations that depend on it.
March 27, 2012 /
Nadja Drost
Pulitzer Center grantee Nadja Drost reports on the struggles gold miners face in Colombia's La Toma community.
March 27, 2012 / Untold Stories
Micah Fink
After being shot by anti-gay gunmen, a young lesbian from Jamaica was granted asylum in the Netherlands.
March 23, 2012 / The Atlantic, Untold Stories
Greg Constantine
Discriminatory laws and policies in the Dominican Republic have stripped Dominicans of Haitian descent of citizenship and deprived them of social services, education and employment.
March 9, 2012 /
Stephanie Hanes, Greg Constantine
From the slums of Nairobi to the sugar plantations of the Dominican Republic to the far reaches of Bangladesh, entire communities live without citizenship rights. They are “the stateless”.
March 9, 2012 / Untold Stories
Jenna Krajeski
Sumer Park is a political and cultural center for Diyarbakir's disenfranchised, offering alternatives to Kurdish youth.

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