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Africa

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

 

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    In this July 15, 2019 photo, Ethiopian Tigray teen migrants rest under a tree on the last stop of their journey before leaving by boat to Yemen in the evening, in Obock, Djibouti. An increasing number of the travelers include women and girls, who face rape and torture at the hands of human traffickers. Image by Nariman El-Mofty / AP Photo. Djibouti, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Outsourcing Migrants

    Determined, Ethiopian Female Migrants Risk all for Saudi

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    Multiple Authors
    February 14, 2020
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    Kohain Halevi greets actress AJ Johnson. Halevi, a New York native, has lived in Ghana 25 years. Image by Kohain Halevi. Ghana, 2020.
    English
    PART OF: Finding Their Roots: Blacks Repatriate to Africa

    Blacks in Ghana: Welcome Home

    author image
    Lottie Joiner
    Grantee
    February 11, 2020
    Publication logo
  • If Afrormosia goes extinct, it could threaten the forest’s resilience and stability, increasing greenhouse gas emissions and unleashing more chaotic weather on frica and the rest of the world. It’s in everyone’s interest to protect these trees. Image by Sarah Waiswa. Democratic Republic of Congo, 2019.
    English

    Pulitzer Center Update

    Vox 'Supertrees' Series Nominated for ASME Ellie Award

    The Pulitzer Center-supported series on supertrees around the world was chosen as a finalist for the...

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    Multiple Authors
    February 7, 2020
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    Sudanese Minister of Justice Nasredeen Abdulbari at work. Image by Rebecca Hamilton. Sudan, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: After Dictatorship

    The Georgetown Student Who Became Justice Minister of Sudan

    author image
    Rebecca Hamilton
    Grantee
    February 5, 2020
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    In the field: Journalist Michelle Nel (left) with Pastor Solly Mhaule, a community elder who believes the Public Protector needs to investigate the MalaMala land deal. Image by Dennis Scully. South Africa, 2019.
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    PART OF: Dominion: Land Grab in the Name of Conservation

    Beyond Parachute Journalism

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    Multiple Authors
    February 5, 2020
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    A tour guide comforts NAACP Youth and College Director Dena Loftin inside the Cape Coast Slave Castle on Ghana's coast. Africans captured by slave traders were herded inside small dungeons and endured horrendous conditions before being put on a ship to lands unknown. Those who died were thrown to the sharks; those who survived were sent across the sea in chains. Image by NAACP. Ghana, 2020.
    English
    PART OF: Finding Their Roots: Blacks Repatriate to Africa

    In Ghana's Year of Return, NAACP Goes Home on Behalf of the Ancestors

    author image
    Lottie Joiner
    Grantee
    February 2, 2020
    Publication logo
  • Finding Their Roots: Blacks Repatriate to Africa
    English

    Project

    Finding Their Roots: Blacks Repatriate to Africa

    Tired of American racism, Black Americans are moving to African countries like Ghana where they are...

    author image
    Lottie Joiner
    Grantee
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Finding Their Roots: Blacks Repatriate to Africa
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    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.
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    PART OF: Sucked Dry: Land Grabs and Water Access in the Nile River Basin

    Sucked Dry

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    Multiple Authors
    February 1, 2020
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    Kruger National Park. Image by Shutterstock. South Africa, undated.
    English
    PART OF: Dominion: Land Grab in the Name of Conservation

    Conservation Capture

    author image
    Michelle Nel
    Grantee
    January 27, 2020
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    View from safari vehicle in Sabi Sands Game Reserve. Image by Shutterstock. South Africa, undated.
    English
    PART OF: Dominion: Land Grab in the Name of Conservation

    R1.1-Billion Land Claim ‘Captured’

    author image
    Michelle Nel
    Grantee
    January 22, 2020
    Publication logo
  • The Project 'Dominion: Land Grab in the Name of Conservation' explores the benefactors of the multimillion-dollar Mala-Mala deal.
    English

    Project

    Dominion: Land Grab in the Name of Conservation

    Land reform, or sleight of hand? Who benefited from the multimillion-dollar MalaMala deal in greater...

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    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Dominion: Land Grab in the Name of Conservation
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    Students at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School in Dakar, Senegal, relax after classes. Image by Michelle Tyrene Johnson. Senegal, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: A Tale of Three Kings

    What Kansas City Can Learn From Dakar, Amsterdam and Memphis About Naming Streets for MLK

    author image
    Michelle Tyrene Johnson
    Grantee
    January 19, 2020
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