Barbara Borst teaches journalism and international affairs at New York University. She worked in South Africa and Kenya for five years and in France for another five. She has reported from Africa, Europe and North America for The Associated Press, The Boston Globe, The Dallas Morning News, The Los Angeles Times, The Denver Post and Inter Press Service, among others. She has written for GlobalPost and is a Huffington Post blogger. She is the founder of the reporting websites Tutawaza.com and CivicIdea.com.
Articles:
Jail One Sex Trafficker, Save Thousands of Girls, Activists Say
By Barbara Borst
Kolkata, India – More than 380 families lived for generations under a bridge southeast of downtown. They did not own the land where they built shelters; they scratched out a living as leather workers, rickshaw drivers, beggars and rag pickers.
Indian Women Seek Exit from Prostitution
By Barbara Borst
Kolkata, India – Salma Begum and Salena Begum are clear about one thing: they want prostitution abolished in India.
https://tutawaza.com/2013/02/01/indian-women-seek-exit-from-prostitution/#more-138
Keeping the Movement on Track in India
By Barbara Borst
Delhi, India – India has been in an uproar for weeks over sexual violence against women.
The brutal gang rape of a 23-year-old student on a bus in Delhi on Dec. 16, and her death from those injuries several days later, sparked a series of demonstrations here in the capital demanding action from police and politicians. The crime has turned a spotlight on discrimination against women in all its forms.
https://tutawaza.com/2013/02/01/keeping-the-movement-on-track-in-india/#more-135
Is this the best way to finance elections?
By Barbara Borst
Money has swaggered through U.S. elections for decades – buying television ads, robo-calls and bumper stickers. But this year, it has been up to new tricks.
https://tutawaza.com/2012/11/16/is-this-the-best-way-to-finance-elections/#more-92
Corruption vs. Free Speech: What does money do in
US elections?
By Barbara Borst
Measuring the exact impact of money on voters has proved hard to do. More often the focus is on how money alters the behavior of politicians or affects the political system as a whole. Scholars, activists and politicians disagree about what money really does in elections.