Skip to main content
Main Menu Navigation
Pulitzer Center Logo
View Primary Menu
Search
  • ABOUT
    Our Mission and Model Staff Board of Directors Impact Annual Reports Donors Ethics and Standards Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Employment
  • UPDATES
  • EVENTS
    Upcoming Events Conferences
  • WEBINARS ON-DEMAND
  • COMMUNITY
  • IMPACT
DONATE
  • JOURNALISM
      • PULITZER CENTER JOURNALISM
      • STORIES
      • Stories by Pulitzer Center Grantees
      • Stories by Student Reporting Fellows
      • PROJECTS
      • FIELD NOTES
      • APPLY FOR JOURNALISM GRANTS
      • FOCUS AREAS
      • Climate and Environment
      • Global Health
      • Peace and Conflict
      • Human Rights
      • Information and Artificial Intelligence
      • INITIATIVES
      • AI Accountability Network
      • AI Spotlight Series
      • StoryReach U.S.
      • U.S. Local News Reporting
      • Ocean Reporting Network
      • Rainforest Investigations Network
      • Rainforest Reporting
      • Transparency and Governance
      • Our Work/Environment
      • NEWSLETTER ARCHIVE
  • EDUCATION
      • CAMPUS CONSORTIUM PROGRAM & PARTNERS
      • Campus Consortium Program
      • Campus Consortium News
      • Campus Consortium Partners
      • Reporting Fellowships
      • Reporting Fellow Bios
      • Stories by Reporting Fellows
      • Resources for Reporting Fellows
      • Campus Consortium Advisory Council
      • Join the Campus Consortium Network
      • INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION AND OUTREACH
      • K-12 PROGRAMS AND RESOURCES
      • Programs for Teachers and Students
      • Lesson Plans
      • Journalist Visits to Classrooms
      • The 1619 Project Education Portal
      • Student Contests
      • Professional Development for Educators
      • Journalism Skillbuilder Lesson Series
      • K-12 Education News
  • GRANTS & FELLOWSHIPS
      • GRANTS & FELLOWSHIPS
      • Tips for a Successful Grant Application
      • Pulitzer Center Crediting Requirements
      • OPPORTUNITIES FOR JOURNALISTS
      • Global Reporting Grants
      • AI Reporting Grants
      • Global Health Inequities, Risks and Solutions
      • Transparency & Governance Reporting Grants
      • U.S. Civil Society Microgrants 2026
      • Rainforest Reporting Grants
      • Conflict Reporting
      • Ocean and Fisheries Reporting Grants
      • Climate and Labor Reporting Grants
      • Africa Reporting Grants
      • U.S. Local Reporting Grants
      • Machine Learning Reporting Grants
      • OPPORTUNITIES FOR EDUCATORS & CIVIL SOCIETY ORGS
      • The 1619 Project Education Impact Grants
      • Pulitzer Center Teacher Fellowship
      • Impact Seed Funding
      • U.S. Civil Society Microgrants 2026
      • OPPORTUNITIES FOR CAMPUS CONSORTIUM MEMBERS
      • Campus Consortium Reporting Fellowships
      • Post-Grad Reporting Fellowships
  • IMPACT
  • RESOURCES
  • COMMUNITY
  • EVENTS
  • WEBINARS ON-DEMAND
  • ABOUT
    Our Mission and Model Staff Board of Directors Impact Annual Reports Donors Ethics and Standards Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Employment
  • UPDATES
  • EVENTS
    Upcoming Events Conferences
  • WEBINARS ON-DEMAND
  • COMMUNITY
  • IMPACT
DONATE

Philippines

Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on this country.

 

  • ×
    An investigator inspects the body of alias “John Rex,” who was on the village’s drug watch list. Police said he fell from a motorcycle that was driven by an unidentified companion while “John Rex” was shooting at the police. In what police said was an act of self-defense, they fired back at him. Image by Pat Nabong. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: The Psychological Toll of Duterte's Drug War: Mental Health in Low-Income Communities

    Alone in the Aftermath: Families of Slain Drug Suspects Struggle with Little Support

    author image
    Pat Nabong
    2017 Reporting Fellow
    January 22, 2018
    Publication logo
  • Image by Pat Nabong. Philippines, 2017.
    English

    Project

    The Psychological Toll of Duterte's Drug War: Mental Health in Low-Income Communities

    The drug war in the Philippines has killed thousands of drug suspects from low-income communities...

    author image
    Pat Nabong
    2017 Reporting Fellow
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - The Psychological Toll of Duterte's Drug War: Mental Health in Low-Income Communities
  • ×
    Sara poses for a portrait while cradling her late son’s one-year-old son. Image by Pat Nabong. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: The Psychological Toll of Duterte's Drug War: Mental Health in Low-Income Communities

    Their Own Government Killed Their Families. Now These Women Are Helping Each Other Survive.

    author image
    Pat Nabong
    2017 Reporting Fellow
    January 14, 2018
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Under President Rodrigo Duterte, thousands have died at the hands of police or the masked vigilantes who roam Manila's vast slums. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: In Defiance and In Defense of Duterte

    Capital Offenses

    author image
    James Whitlow Delano
    Grantee
    November 13, 2017
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Failing to repay loans can have serious consequences in Qatar. Graphic by Rappler. 2017.
    English
    PART OF: A Woman's Crime and Punishment

    How OFWs Can Avoid Getting Buried in Debt

    author image
    Ana P. Santos
    2014 Persephone Miel Fellow
    October 8, 2017
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Pedro Abletes, on the far left, comforts his wife, as they say their final good-byes to their son, Junmar. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: In Defiance and In Defense of Duterte

    On the Frontlines

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    September 14, 2017
    Publication logo
  • Journalist Ana Santos and photographer James Whitlow Delano report from a divided Philippines, where the country itself may be the biggest casualty of Duterte’s war on drugs. Image courtesy of Ana P. Santos and James Whitlow Delano.
    English

    Education Resource

    Meet the Journalists: Ana P. Santos and James Whitlow Delano

    When he made a pitch for the presidency of the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte made a bold promise to...

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE about Meet the Journalists: Ana P. Santos and James Whitlow Delano
  • ×
    Zina laws treat sex outside of marriage and pregnancy out of wedlock as crimes punishable by imprisonment. But without means to seek legal recourse, it is mostly low-skilled migrant woman who face charges. Image by OM. Qatar, 2017. 
    English
    PART OF: A Woman's Crime and Punishment

    The Boyfriend System: Migrant Life in Qatar

    author image
    Ana P. Santos
    2014 Persephone Miel Fellow
    September 4, 2017
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Remy Fernandez, 84 years old, holds two of the seven grandchildren she is raising. Her youngest son, Constantino de Juan, a methamphetamine user, was killed by masked men in December, 2016. Upon seeing his attackers, Juan instructed five-year-old CJ, shown here wearing a red tank top, to take care of his siblings. The children's mother is in prison due to a drug arrest. Baby RJ, in the "daddy's little helper" T-shirt, was born in prison. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: In Defiance and In Defense of Duterte

    Duterte’s War on Drugs Leaves Tragic Legacy for Filipino Families – in Pictures

    author image
    James Whitlow Delano
    Grantee
    September 1, 2017
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Remy Fernandez, 84-years-old, holds her grandchildren that she is raising, there are seven in all, because her son, Constantino de Juan, a methamphetamine user, was killed by masked men and the mother is in prison due to a drug arrest. The chair in which she sits has a hole in it after it passed through his body. Baby RJ was born in prison. Constantino, upon seeing the masked assassins, instructed CJ, 5-years-old and wearing the red tank top, to take care of his siblings because he knew he was about to be…
    English
    PART OF: In Defiance and In Defense of Duterte

    Stains on Duterte's Society

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    August 17, 2017
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Mark Escueta spent P17,000 for a brand-new car seat for son Pele, money he considers well spent. The car seat kept the boy safe during a car crash that left Pele's mom, actress and TV host Jolina Magdangal, with slight injuries. Image courtesy of Mark Escueta. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: Roads Kill

    Seats That Save Kids’ Lives: Why Are They Rarely Used in the Philippines?

    author image
    Dinna Louise C. Dayao
    Grantee
    August 17, 2017
    Publication logo
  • ×
    The indentation on the wrist of Julius Soriano, 24-years-old, shows signs that his hands were bound before he was shot to death during a police operation in Caloocan, Metro Manila. There is a bullet wound in his arm too, and the slug is still embedded in his arm, coming to a stop exactly were the indentation line left an impression in his skin, suggesting that whatever caused the indentation stopped the bullet too. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Philippines, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: In Defiance and In Defense of Duterte

    Signs of Execution

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    August 15, 2017
    Publication logo

Pagination

  • « First
  • ‹‹
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • ››
  • Last »

Contact

2000 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Suite #7000
Washington, DC 20006
(202) 332-0982
[email protected]

Follow us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
  Follow us on Instagram
  Subscribe to us on YouTube

Media Requests

[email protected]

Privacy Policy

 

Sign up for our newsletter