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

Uganda

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

 

  • ×
    A garden owned by a Walumbe resident in the buffer zone between Lake Victoria and the forest plantation. Image by Annika McGinnis. Uganda, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Sucked Dry: Land Grabs and Water Access in the Nile River Basin

    Trapped in the Buffer Zone

    author image
    Annika McGinnis
    Grantee
    June 10, 2020
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Officials from EPHWOR give out birth control pills to a woman in Buhweju district. Image by Fredrick Mugira. Uganda, undated.
    English
    PART OF: Coronavirus in Nile Basin: Dual Dangers of a Pandemic and Water Crisis

    How a Grassroots Organization Is Preventing Unintended Pregnancies During COVID-19 Lockdown

    author image
    Fredrick Mugira
    Congo Basin RJF Grantee
    June 3, 2020
    Publication logo
  • Land acquisitions along River Rwizi have reduced its width and length. Image by Fredrick Mugira. Uganda, 2019.
    English

    Project

    Coronavirus in Nile Basin: Dual Dangers of a Pandemic and Water Crisis

    As the world tries to contain COVID-19 pandemic, how are already-vulnerable and water-scarce...

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Coronavirus in Nile Basin: Dual Dangers of a Pandemic and Water Crisis
  • A woman walks with a child in the Omugo settlement for refugees who have fled from South Sudan to Uganda, June 27, 2019. Image by Adriane Ohanesian. Uganda, 2019.
    English

    Pulitzer Center Update

    Amanda Sperber Shortlisted for One World Media Awards 2020

    Pulitzer Center-grantee Amanda Sperber was shortlisted in the 2020 One World Media Awards for her...

    author image
    Amanda Sperber
    Grantee
    April 29, 2020
  • ×
    Water weed in Lake Tana. Flower farms have been accused of contaminating Lake Tana with fertilizers. Fertilizers stimulate the growth of water weed. Image by Geoffrey Kamadi. Kenya, undated.
    English
    PART OF: Sucked Dry: Land Grabs and Water Access in the Nile River Basin

    Sucked Dry

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    February 1, 2020
    Publication logo
  • Milly Lakot, 19, was diagnosed with nodding syndrome in 2008. She suffered burns in 2016 after falling into a fire during a seizure. Image by Esther Ruth Mbabazi. Uganda, 2019.
    English

    Education Resource

    Meet the Journalist: Esther Ruth Mbabazi

    For over two decades, the Northern Uganda has been tormented by a mysterious disease—Nodding...

    author image
    Esther Ruth Mbabazi
    Grantee
    READ MORE about Meet the Journalist: Esther Ruth Mbabazi
  • ×
    Lilias Diria with her son Abraham, age 2, in their home in the Bidi Bidi settlement in Uganda, June 25, 2019. Image by Adriane Ohanesian. Uganda, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Was Your Sister Disturbed?

    In Refugee Settlements in Uganda, Survivors Grapple With How to Raise Children Born of Rape

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    October 13, 2019
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Iganga town, a city of approximately 55,000 residents in East Central Uganda. Here, a network of strong and passionate women are fighting to end sexual violence through providing support for victims and encouraging the normalization of conversations surrounding the topic of sexual violence. Image by Keishi Foecke. Uganda, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: #MeToo: The Fight Against the ‘Open Secret’ of Sexual Violence in Uganda

    No More Silence: The Emergence of the #MeToo Movement in Uganda

    author image
    Keishi Foecke
    2019 Reporting Fellow
    October 1, 2019
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Benjamin Betty (left) and Nakaziba Sumaya are part of the larger female-led movement to end sexual violence in Uganda. Image by Keishi Foecke. Uganda, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: #MeToo: The Fight Against the ‘Open Secret’ of Sexual Violence in Uganda

    Uganda: De-Normalizing Sexual Violence

    author image
    Keishi Foecke
    2019 Reporting Fellow
    September 30, 2019
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Margaret Arach, 42, watches her children at her home in Pader District, Northern Uganda. She is the sole caretaker of her seven children, two of whom suffer from nodding syndrome. Image by Esther Ruth Mbabazi. Uganda, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: A Mysterious Fate: Nodding Syndrome in Northern Uganda

    A Devastating Illness Rocked Uganda, Then Disappeared. Disabled Children — and a Mystery — Remain

    author image
    Esther Ruth Mbabazi
    Grantee
    September 26, 2019
    Publication logo
  • Nodding Syndrome project page
    English

    Project

    A Mysterious Fate: Nodding Syndrome in Northern Uganda

    A project documenting nodding syndrome in Northern Uganda, a disease with an unknown cause and no...

    author image
    Esther Ruth Mbabazi
    Grantee
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - A Mysterious Fate: Nodding Syndrome in Northern Uganda
  • ×
    Betty Omina discovered that she was HIV positive when she reached the refugee settlements in Uganda. Image by Adriane Ohanesian. Uganda, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Was Your Sister Disturbed?

    Sexual Violence, HIV, and Conflict in South Sudan

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    August 30, 2019
    Publication logo

Pagination

  • « First
  • ‹‹
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • ››
  • 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