The 2008 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting was awarded earlier this month to New York Times reporter Jake Hooker (pictured left) and Walt Bodganich for their Investigative
Reporting series entitled "A Toxic
Pipeline" which traced the deadly flow of toxic ingredients in Chinese-made products around the world.
Hooker's writing has also appeared in NPCA's WorldView magazine. His article "Over the Rainbow: China struggles with drugs and the virus" was published in our special issue on HIV/AIDS and can be read here.
From the New York Times website:
Jake Hooker was born on Oct. 27, 1973 in Newton, Mass. He attended
Milton Academy and Dartmouth College, where he studied art history. For
two years he lived in the backcountry of the White Mountain National
Forest as a caretaker for several backcountry huts operated by the
Appalachian Mountain Club.
He was a volunteer in the Peace Corps in China starting in 2000. For
two years, he taught English at a middle school in Wanxian, a small
town along the middle reach of the Yangtze River, near the Three
Gorges. In his free time there, he learned Chinese. He published his
first newspaper article, about his life in Wanxian, in The Boston Globe
in 2001.
In 2003, Mr. Hooker returned to China to work for the Surmang
Foundation, a non-governmental organization that runs a free health
clinic for nomads in eastern Tibet. Western doctors work alongside
Tibetans there; patients come on horseback. Mr. Hooker translated for
Western doctors and Tibetan doctors, bought medicine, wrote reports and
met with health officials, Tibetan monks and other people in the
Surmang Valley.
Mr. Hooker has traveled to most places in China writing about rural
life, AIDS, ethnic identity, and archaeology. Since 2006, he has
contributed research and reporting to a wide range of China coverage
for The New York Times.
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