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Africa

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

 

  • A mountain gorilla in Volcanoes National Park, Rwanda. Image by Elham Shabahat. Rwanda, 2017.
    English

    Project

    Rwanda: Climate Change and Mountain Gorillas

    In Rwanda, increased floods, droughts, and landslides have caused deaths and destroyed homes. How...

    author image
    Elham Shirin
    2017 Reporting Fellow
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Rwanda: Climate Change and Mountain Gorillas
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    Colobus monkey and baby in Nyungwe National Park. Nyungwe is one of the region’s largest and oldest-remaining patches of montane rainforest. Thousands of Angola Colobus monkeys inhabit Nyungwe, and travel in groups of up to 400 individuals—a feature unique to Nyungwe and any arboreal primates globally. Image by Elham Shabahat. Rwanda, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: Rwanda: Climate Change and Mountain Gorillas

    Rwanda: Parks and People

    author image
    Elham Shirin
    2017 Reporting Fellow
    June 20, 2017
    Publication logo
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    Masika Katsuva set up a centre for rape survivors in Minova, Congo, where soldiers raped at least 76 women and children over several days in 2012. Image by Fiona Lloyd-Davies. Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2012.
    English
    PART OF: Congo: Consequences of a Conflict with No End

    Congo: A Culture of Impunity Still Exists Around Sexual Violence

    author image
    Fiona Lloyd-Davies
    Grantee
    June 19, 2017
    Publication logo
  • English

    Lesson Plans

    Resources for the University of Chicago Summer Institute for Educators 2017

    This plan includes lessons connected to the work of journalists that presented at the University of Chicago Summer Teacher Institute in June 2017.

    author image
    Pulitzer Center Education
    Lesson Builder User
    READ MORE about Resources for the University of Chicago Summer Institute for Educators 2017
    June 19, 2017
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    An informal settlement near Johannesburg sits atop a pile of unrehabilitated gold mine waste. Image by Mark Olalde. South Africa, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: South Africa's Toxic Legacy

    South Africa: R60-Billion Held for Mines that Are Never Closed

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    Mark Olalde
    Grantee
    June 19, 2017
    Publication logo
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    A shack fire breaks out in the Zamimpilo informal settlement. Poor living conditions complicate efforts to link mine waste to health issues. Image by Mark Olalde. South Africa, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: South Africa's Toxic Legacy

    South Africa: The Dust Mountain That’s Just Always There

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    Mark Olalde
    Grantee
    June 19, 2017
    Publication logo
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    Children, boys and adults work daily, weather permitting, digging rocks out of the slag heaps adjacent to the non-operating lead mine at Kabwe. The larger rocks are piled, crushed by small hammers, bagged, and ultimately sold as building material. The rocks contain up to 5 percent lead and are highly toxic. Locals with no other jobs perform this hazardous work.  Image by Larry C. Price. Zambia, 2017. 
    English
    PART OF: The Black Death of Kabwe

    Zambia: The Rock Crushers of Kabwe

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    Larry C. Price
    Grantee
    June 16, 2017
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    Duvha Power Station looms over the Masakhane informal settlement near eMalahleni in Mpumalanga. In 2015, the government pledged R18-billion to assist or relocate 15 mining-affected communities, including Masakhane. Image by Mark Olalde. South Africa, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: South Africa's Toxic Legacy

    South Africa's Future Without Coal

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    Mark Olalde
    Grantee
    June 15, 2017
    Publication logo
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    English
    PART OF: Smoke and Mirrors

    Malawi: Toxic Cooking Smoke Silently Kills

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    June 15, 2017
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    Fostina Kasaila Fostina, 11, a 5th grader. With her is Enoch Kasaila, her grandfather. At 4 years of age, Kasaila started showing signs of lead poisoning including loss of memory and lethargy. Image by Larry C. Price. Zambia, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: The Black Death of Kabwe

    Legacy of Lead: The Children of Kabwe

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    Larry C. Price
    Grantee
    June 14, 2017
    Publication logo
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    Jacqueline's mother Eliza holds her daughter - she's still sleepy from her operation. Image by Nathalie Bertrams. Malawi, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: Smoke and Mirrors

    Cooking on Open Fire Causes More Victims Than AIDS

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    Multiple Authors
    June 14, 2017
    Publication logo
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    In Pitala, a village in the north of Malawi, food is cooked over open fire. Image by Nathalie Bertrams. Malawi, 2017.
    English
    PART OF: Smoke and Mirrors

    Malawi's Toxic Kitchens

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    June 13, 2017
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