Download and Print the 2020 Pulitzer Prize Winners
This printable card, in the past distributed to attendees of the Pulitzer announcement event at Columbia University, is being made available online. It makes a great bookmark.
This printable card, in the past distributed to attendees of the Pulitzer announcement event at Columbia University, is being made available online. It makes a great bookmark.
Columbia University today announces the 2020 Pulitzer Prizes, awarded on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize Board. The Board also announces the election of its two co-chairs: Stephen Engelberg, Editor-in-Chief, ProPublica, and Aminda Marqués Gonzalez, President, Publisher and Executive Editor, Miami Herald.
The following remarks were delivered in New York, N.Y., by Pulitzer Prize Administrator Dana Canedy as part of the announcement of the 2020 Prize winners in Journalism, Books, Drama and Music on May 4, 2020.
Read T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong's original reporting for ProPublica, which won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting and inspired the eight-episode show.
Pulitzer-winning reportage of the September 11th attacks offers indelible first drafts of history.
The 'daunting and spectacular' Arizona Republic/USA Today Network project on the proposed Mexican border wall encompassed 'liberating opportunities and difficult choices.'
The Pulitzer Prizes welcome submissions in all 14 Journalism categories — including the newly expanded Breaking News category. For the second year, magazines are eligible in all Prize categories.
The New York Times won an Explanatory Reporting prize for 'illustrating the darker side of a changing global economy for workers and consumers' by looking into Apple and other tech companies' business practices.
Watch a live stream of Pulitzer Prize Administrator Mike Pride announcing the 2017 Pulitzer Prizes on April 10, 2017 at 3 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
Writing from Aktau, Kazakhstan, during a multi-year journey on foot, two-time Pulitzer winner Paul Salopek reflects on his low-tech, high-tech approach to journalism.