Journalist and author Eyal Press’ book Dirty Work: Essential Jobs and the Hidden Toll of Inequality in America examines the morally troubling jobs that are done in our name, and shines a light on the workers who do them. Press argues that these workers are hidden by the powerful in society who want to keep the violence of prisons, slaughterhouses, and battlefields out of the public eye.
From War Photographer to War Crimes Investigator
There's More Aid than Ever, So Why are Poorest Nations Getting Less?
Ardent Aid Critic Says He's Misunderstood
Promo: Doing Good in Repressive Regimes
Occupy Charity: Big Money in Few Hands
Promo: Charities Must Measure What Matters Most
Why are Billions of Charitable Dollars Sitting in the Bank?
Promo: Why are Billions of Donor Dollars Sitting in the Bank?
Part Three: Is This Charity Any Good?
Tools for Good Giving
Is it Better to Give Locally or Globally?
The Great Surge in Developing Nations No One is Talking About
Good Deeds in Cold Blood: Extreme Altruists
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When a School Markets Students as Charity Cases
Promo: Public School Teachers Get Cozy with Donors
No Tech Solutions for Poverty, says former Microsoft Researcher
Curing Violence Like an Infectious Disease
Building a Self-Reliant Africa from the Bottom-Up
Your Letters: 'Cultural Imperialism,' Aid Work Advice
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