Copy

Also: The black market you've never heard of, salmon collapse in the lower Yukon

View this email in your browser
A round-up of reporting from our grantees, upcoming events, and news from the Pulitzer Center

‘I am a Dreamer and All I Need is a Chance’

The abrupt departure of U.S. forces from Afghanistan has raised concerns on many fronts, none more so perhaps than the fate of millions of Afghan women and girls who face the likely loss of significant gains in education and opportunity that they achieved during the two decades of U.S. and allied occupation. The reporting by grantees Jane Ferguson and Paula Bronstein underscores the painful challenges Afghan women now face.

The struggle for the rights of women and girls is worldwide, of course, as shown in multiple other projects in recent weeks. Grantees Natalie Alcoba and Anita Pouchard Serra have reported the inspiring efforts by domestic workers in Argentina to assert their collective rights. Grantee Varsha Bansal tells a similar story about child care workers, mostly women, in India. Grantee Shakeeb Asrar exposes the appalling failure of Pakistan’s government to enforce laws on child labor and domestic workers.

For U.S. examples, there’s the eye-opening story by William & Mary Reporting Fellow Emily Topness on the ways that COVID-19 has intensified gender discrimination within Alaska’s fishing industry. WBEZ reporter Natalie Moore, our Richard C. Longworth Fellow, shares what Chicago might learn about approaches to incarceration from experiences in Finland, where incarcerated women are allowed to keep their young children with them in “open” prisons with a focus more on rehabilitation than punishment.

And lastly: the inspiring, moving story that City Colleges Chicago Reporting Fellow Imran Mohammad Fazal Hoque tells of Azimah Jalil, a Rohingya refugee from Myanmar who is now relocated in Buffalo, New York, and on her way to a nursing degree. Jalil and her family escaped Myanmar by boat in 2011 and spent nearly four years in refugee camps in Malaysia before coming to the United States. “I am a dreamer and all I need is a chance,” Jalil explains. Hoque is himself a stateless Rohingya refugee.

The Longworth Fellowship is made possible with support from the Clinton Family Foundation and the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Our global work on gender equality and empowerment is supported by PIMCO. In choosing projects to support, we rely on these and other donors—and also on the great ideas we get from journalist proposals and from people like you.

I hope you’ll click on the link above, to our annual survey of the Pulitzer Center community. We’re eager for your feedback on what we’re doing well, what we could do better, and the issues important to you.

All Best,

Jon Sawyer
Executive Director

Photo: Displaced Afghans from the northern provinces are evacuated from a makeshift IDP camp in Share-e-Naw park to various mosques and schools in Kabul, Afghanistan. Image by Paula Bronstein. Afghanistan, 2021. 
Become a Champion!

Donate any amount to become a Pulitzer Center Champion. In addition to supporting great journalism and educational programming, you’ll also gain exclusive access to donor-only events, like quarterly conversations with Pulitzer grantees and leadership.

IMPACT

Five Pulitzer Center-supported projects have been nominated for the 2021 Online Journalism Awards

EVENTS

The Exit Is Not the End: What’s Next for Afghanistan

September 23, 12:00pm EDT
Online Event
September 18 to December 1 
Brooklyn, NY
September 18, 7:00pm EDT
Brooklyn Bridge Park, Pier 1, Brooklyn NY

MORE FROM PULITZER CENTER

VICE News
The Most Dangerous Black Market You've Never Heard Of

Tom Laffay, Bram Ebus, Gustavo Faleiros, Gaulbert Sutherland, Wilfred Leeuwin, Jaap van 't Kruis

Mongabay
In Peru, Ancient Food Technologies Revived in Pursuit of Future Security
Illa Liendo Tagle and Sharon Castellanos

Associated Press
Gift for El Salvador Mudslide Victims Comes at Steep Price
Alberto Arce

Anchorage Daily News
Salmon Collapse Sends Alaskans on Lower Yukon Scrambling for Scarce Alternatives
Zachariah Hughs

The People's Archive of Rural India
In Osmanabad: Crop Insurance, No Assurance
Parth MN

The Nigerian Voice
Cost of Farming: How Iseyin Women Farmers Cope with Climate Change and the Credit Crunch
Francis Annagu

Pulitzer Center
‘To Make a Person Whole’: Body, Mind, and Spirit
Maiya Mahoney

Pulitzer Center 
Post-Ferguson Police Reform Stalls Among Racial Divisions
William Freivogel and Orli Sheffey

Pulitzer Center 
Special Call for Reporting Fellowship Proposals on Gender Equality, Justice, and Climate Science
Kem Sawyer, Libby Moeller, Steve Sapienza

Pulitzer Center
Pulitzer Center's Call to Whistleblowers
Gustavo Faleiros 

Support journalism and education for the public good!
The Pulitzer Center promotes awareness of underreported global issues through direct support for quality journalism across all media platforms and a unique program of education and public outreach.
You are receiving this email because you either opted in at our website or signed up at a Pulitzer Center event.
Our mailing address is:
Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
1779 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Suite 615
Washington, District Of Columbia 20036

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list