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North America

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

 

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    Money seized from a St. Matthews, KY hotel in February 2018 through asset forfeiture. Image courtesy of Jefferson County Circuit Court. United States, 2018.
    English
    PART OF: For-Profit Policing in Kentucky

    Seized: Few Kentucky Police Agencies Report What They Take Through Asset Forfeiture

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    Jacob Ryan
    Grantee
    November 29, 2018
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  • Screenshot from the Taken microsite. Image by Dan McCarey. United States, 2018.
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    Project

    Taken: How Police Profit From Seized Property

    A data-driven look at the impact of civil asset forfeiture reform laws throughout the Midwest.

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    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Taken: How Police Profit From Seized Property
  • Image courtesy of Crain's News Pro.
    English

    Pulitzer Center Update

    Troubled Times: Why We Need to Support In-Depth Journalism

    Senior Editor Tom Hundley discusses the importance of funding in-depth reporting in the latest...

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    Tom Hundley
    Pulitzer Center Staff
    November 29, 2018
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    Nome, Alaska, mayor Richard Beneville is excited about the opportunities that climate change is opening up for Arctic communities. In recent years less ice has meant more tourism for the town of about 3,800 people near the Bering Strait between the US and Russia. “If people can get there, they'll go,” Beneville says. “Tourism according to Dicky!” Image by Nick Mott. United States, 2018.
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    PART OF: Cold Comfort

    As the Arctic Warms Up, a 'New Ocean' Is Bringing New Commerce to the Top of the World

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    Amy Martin
    Grantee
    November 28, 2018
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    2017 DC Climate March. Image by Mark Dixon. Washington DC, 2017. (CC BY 2.0)
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    PART OF: Indira Lakshmanan Reports

    Opinion: It’s Not Too Late to Avert Catastrophe. First, Accept Climate Change Is Real

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    Indira Lakshmanan
    Pulitzer Center Alum
    November 28, 2018
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    Members of the Mazahua Frente chant during a protest outside the governor’s building in Toluca. The group demanded to meet with the governor to discuss their community needs. Image by Meg Vatterott. Mexico, 2018.
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    PART OF: The Mazahua and Mexico's Water Crisis

    Inside the Water Rights Battle Between the Mexican Government and the Mazahua

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    Meg Vatterott
    2018 Reporting Fellow
    November 26, 2018
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    Image courtesy of MSNBC.
    English
    PART OF: Indira Lakshmanan Reports

    Why President Trump May Be Defending Saudi Arabia

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    Indira Lakshmanan
    Pulitzer Center Alum
    November 26, 2018
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    Female and male instructors debrief Swedish mechanized infantry recruits during training. In this platoon, 1 of 58 recruits is a woman. Image by Teresa Fazio. Sweden, 2018.
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    PART OF: Stand at Attention and Bite the Bullet: Sweden's Gender-Neutral Draft in the Era of #MeToo

    Opinion: Let Women Be Warriors

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    Teresa Fazio
    Grantee
    November 23, 2018
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    Tony Mao makes noodles at Everyday Noodles in Squirrel Hill. Image by Stephanie Chambers. United States, 2018.
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    PART OF: Stretched Thin: How Taiwanese Noodles Affect Pittsburgh's Economy

    How Changes to U.S. Immigration Affects Pittsburgh's Restaurant Scene

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    Melissa E. McCart
    Grantee
    November 22, 2018
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    Image courtesy of Steph Chambers for Post-Gazette. United States, 2018.
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    PART OF: Stretched Thin: How Taiwanese Noodles Affect Pittsburgh's Economy

    Could Chinese Noodle-Pulling Be That Hard? Experts Say Yes.

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    Melissa E. McCart
    Grantee
    November 21, 2018
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    Honduran migrant Sandra and her son, Angel, have been staying at the Todo por Ellos migrant shelter in Tapachula since June. She left behind her husband, a gang member, out of fear that her children would inherit the gang life or be killed. Image by Jose Cabezas. Mexico, 2018. 
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    PART OF: Family Separation and El Salvador

    Opinion: The Caravans are Coming—And Trump's Tactics Won't Stop Them

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    Lauren Markham
    Grantee
    November 21, 2018
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    Tlingit elder Bob Sam says a prayer at the gravesite of a Native Alaskan child who died while attending the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania. Last month marked the 100th anniversary of the closing of Carlisle, which was the first government off-reservation Indian boarding school in the United States—it would become the model for future boarding schools throughout the U.S. and Canada. Roughly 12,000 Native children attended, many of whom were taken from their families and communities by…
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    PART OF: Signs of Your Identity: Forced Assimilation Education for Indigenous Youth

    Carlisle and the Indian Boarding School Legacy in America

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    Daniella Zalcman
    Grantee
    November 21, 2018
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