Finalists in International Reporting
Not available in full:
“The Playground” (Terrance McCoy • Amazon Kindle Singles)
Jamming Tripoli
Inside Moammar Gadhafi’s secret surveillance network.
Matthieu Aikins Wired May 2012 25min
China's Left Behind Children
Breakneck growth has made China an economic miracle. But will the destruction of families prove to be too high a cost?
Deborah Jian Lee, Sushma Subramanian Foreign Policy May 2012
The Strange Fate of Kim's Video
How the museum-quality 55,000 film collection that an East Village video store gave away ended up in a small, possibly mob-run village in Sicily.
Karina Longworth Village Voice Sep 2012
Pacifists in the Cross-Fire
The Kabul hospital that treats all sides.
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine May 2012 35min
The New Normal
Swift acceptance of gays by the Israeli military helped transform Israel into one of the most gay-friendly countries in the world.
Brian Schaefer Moment Magazine Sep 2012 15min
Disarming Viktor Bout
A profile of the world’s most notorious weapons trafficker.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Mar 2012 35min
Field of Danger
Unexploded ammunition near U.S. firing range poses peril for Afghans.
Kevin Sieff The Washington Post May 2012
Slavery's Last Stronghold
An investigation into slavery in Mauritania.
Edythe McNamee, John D. Sutter CNN Mar 2012 30min
Seafood Slavery
Thailand is the United States’ second-largest supplier of foreign seafood. The accounts of ex-slaves, Thai fishing syndicates, officials, exporters and anti-trafficking case workers, illuminate an opaque offshore supply chain enmeshed in slavery.
What Happened at Dos Erres
In 1982, the Guatemalan military massacred the villagers of Dos Erres, killing more than 200 people. Thirty years later, a Guatemalan living in the US got a phone call from a woman who told him that two boys had been abducted during the massacre – and he was one of them.
See also: “Finding Oscar” (Sebastian Rotella, Ana Arana • ProPublica, Fundación MEPI)
What Happened at Dos Erres
In 1982, the Guatemalan military massacred the villagers of Dos Erres, killing more than 200 people. Thirty years later, a Guatemalan living in the US got a phone call from a woman who told him that two boys had been abducted during the massacre – and he was one of them.
See also: “Finding Oscar” (Sebastian Rotella, Ana Arana • ProPublica, Fundación MEPI)
Mar–Sep 2012 Permalink