About Us: Global Health and Development
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About Us: Global Health and Development
"NPR's global health and development team tells stories about life in our changing world, focusing on low- and middle-income countries also referred to as the Global South. And we keep in mind that we're all neighbors in this global village. NPR receives financial support for this team from the Gates Foundation. NPR is solely responsible for all content. Find more about NPR's standards and practices at NPR.org/ethics, as well as a list of our philanthropic supporters in our annual report."
"We've won awards for our coverage of the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the lives of 15-year-old girls around the world and the revolutionary project in Kenya called "No Sex for Fish." We are always looking for innovations and technology that make life better. Our team is based out of NPR's headquarters in Washington, D.C. We are: Gabrielle Emanuel, correspondent Jonathan Lambert, correspondent"
NPR's global health and development team reports on life in low- and middle-income countries, described as the Global South. The team emphasizes shared global connections and seeks innovations and technology that improve daily life. NPR receives financial support for the team from the Gates Foundation while remaining solely responsible for editorial content. The team operates from NPR headquarters in Washington, D.C., and includes correspondents and editors such as Gabrielle Emanuel, Jonathan Lambert, Fatma Tanis, Ben de la Cruz, Marc Silver, and Rebecca Davis. Coverage has earned awards for reporting on Ebola, adolescent girls, and Kenya's No Sex for Fish project. Stories are available on Instagram, a weekly newsletter, and the global-health homepage.
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