Eternal City, Eternal Divide: Sarah Wildman on Jerusalem
With President Obama on a visit to Israel, journalist Sarah Wildman discusses her reporting on the eternally divided city of Jerusalem.
Some news stories require greater investments of time to report, with journalists conducting exhaustive investigations using data, public and private records and interviews with a host of sources. Pulitzer Center grantee stories tagged with “Investigative” feature in-depth reporting that delves deeply into serious issues. Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on investigative journalism.
With President Obama on a visit to Israel, journalist Sarah Wildman discusses her reporting on the eternally divided city of Jerusalem.
Racist policing practices plagued the case of Stephen Lawrence, as revealed in the Macpherson Inquiry of 1997. Fourteen years later, institutional racism is still a concern for the Lawrence family.
Behind the grandeur of the Vatican lies a darker story. Cardinals and bishops, mostly American, are accusing American nuns of “radical feminism.” Jason Berry reports from the Vatican.
Wisconsin's paper industry has a long and rich history. But with continued digital growth and the rise of China as a paper power, can the state's remaining mills survive?
On the banks of the Brahmaputra environmental degradation pushes Indian women into the arms of traffickers.
Privacy is a rare thing in an Indian village. Still, we wanted to record an intimate interview with trafficked women.
Mother Tekla Famiglietti, head of the Bridgettine Order, runs a small empire of hotels, restaurants, and guesthouses around the world. She has left a distinctive imprint at the Vatican.
The good news is that people in Cambodia are living longer. The bad news is they're getting chronic diseases such as diabetes and high blood pressure. Finding treatment is extremely difficult.
As Pope Benedict steps down and briefly leaves an empty throne, a conflict over spiritual mission and real estate will pause to await the next pope.
Accused of straying from Catholic theology and put under official investigation, tens of thousands of American nuns hope the next pope will end the 'Inquisition.'
”Even the village children talk to us like dogs,” the women say. They were bought and trafficked from poorer states in the northeast of India and now are kept like slaves in villages in Haryana.
“Come and pick up your daughter,” the rapists said. They didn't even bother to hide the crime. But the victim and her father have chosen to fight.