ProjectEnvironment, Politics The State of the Interior As the Department of the Interior embraces industry interests, US public lands are left vulnerable to private sector exploitation under the Trump administration. Adam FedermanFebruary 21, 2018
ProjectJournalism I.F. Stone Award The I.F. Stone Award honored Stone’s legacy of tireless investigations into issues of vital national interest by creating a pathway for emerging reporters to produce their first journalistic investigations. This is what they produced. Jonah Engle, Nicole Pasulka, Nadja Drost, Steve Fisher, Maria Hengeveld & Rebecca BurnsMarch 1, 2017
ProjectHealth, Immigration, Justice Dying in Private Prisons The federal Bureau of Prisons repeatedly ignored its own watchdogs as dozens of immigrants died in the wake of medical neglect in segregated, privatized prisons. Seth Freed WesslerDecember 21, 2016
ProjectLabor The Grind A year-long series on the myriad ways workers are being shortchanged, revealing the exploitative and dangerous labor conditions behind our holidays and rituals — from New Year’s resolutions to Christmas shopping. James Hannaham, Gabriel Thompson, Michelle Chen, Noy Thrupkaew, Maria Hengeveld & Hella WinstonDecember 15, 2016
ProjectPolitics The Alt Right A close look at the rising white nationalist movement and its ties to the Trump campaign and the Trump administration. Sarah Posner, David Neiwert & Josh HarkinsonDecember 1, 2016
ProjectEnvironment, Health DuPont’s Toxic Chemical An exposé of the dangers of the chemical C8 and DuPont’s efforts to evade legal responsibility. Sharon LernerSeptember 15, 2016
ProjectHealth, Justice Nowhere to Turn A yearlong investigation explores the expansion of anti-choice “Crisis Pregnancy Centers” as abortion clinics are shuttering under the pressure of new state restrictions. Meaghan WinterDecember 17, 2015
ProjectWorld The World Bank’s Trail of Misery In developing countries around the globe, forest dwellers, poor villagers and other vulnerable populations claim development projects led by the World Bank — the planet’s oldest and most powerful development lender — have left a trail of misery. Sasha Chavkin, Michael W. Hudson, Ben Hallman, Cécile Schilis-Gallego & Shane ShifflettSeptember 10, 2015
ProjectImmigration The Deadly Checkpoint A yearlong investigation captured the intense desperation experienced by dying migrants and produced a life-saving influx of search-and-rescue agents to the region. John Carlos FreySeptember 8, 2015
ProjectEnvironment, Justice, Politics The Lower Ninth After Katrina Documenting the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and the uneven efforts to rebuild that have left some residents behind. Gary RivlinAugust 25, 2015