The Pulitzer Center offers regular webinars on underreported global issues, as professional development programs for teachers, as workshops for students, and even featuring live dramatic performances! Catch up on our webinar recordings centered on The 1619 Project and racial justice issues below.
-
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: A Closer Look at Less Lethal Weapons
In this conversation, Pulitzer Center grantee Wil Sands discusses less lethal weapons, from...
March 10, 2022 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: Pulitzer Center Launches AI Accountability Network
On February 24, 2022, the Pulitzer Center, Northwestern University, and NU’s Medill School of...
February 25, 2022 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: Winner Mariana Palau calls Breakthrough award transformational
On February 8, 2022, Mariana Palau joined the Pulitzer Center to discuss her 2021 Breakthrough...
February 10, 2022 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: ‘How I Did It’: Nadja Drost Reveals how she Reported on Migrants Crossing the Darien Gap
On February 3, 2022, Pulitzer Center Executive Editor Marina Walker Guevera joined ProPublica Senior...
February 7, 2022 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: Marvin Kalb in Conversation with James Verini
On February 1, 2022, New York Times Magazine contributing writer James Verini joined Pulitzer Center...
February 1, 2022 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: Two Sides of the Climate Coin
Coastal communities in many parts of the world face a double threat from climate change: sea-level...
December 8, 2021 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Webinar On-Demand: Authoritarianism and Misinformation in Eastern Europe
Some countries in Eastern Europe are experiencing democratic backsliding, brutal government...
December 8, 2021 -
Pulitzer Center Update
On-Demand Webinar: Climate Change in the Coastal Northeast
What do Rhode Island, New Jersey, and Massachusetts have in common? Sea-level rise, violent storms...
November 18, 2021 -
Pulitzer Center Update
On-Demand Webinar: 'The Contagion Next Time': A Book Discussion
Science journalist Lisa Palmer and Sandro Galea, dean at the Boston University School of Public...
November 17, 2021