The World from PRX

Mary Kay MagistadMKM

Mary Kay Magistad

Mary Kay Magistad is formerly The World’s East Asia correspondent. She lived and reported in the region for two decades. Mary Kay is now based in San Francisco.During her time in Asia, she traveled regularly and widely throughout China and beyond, exploring how China’s rapid transformation has affected individual lives and exploring the bigger geopolitical, economic and environmental implications of China’s rise. She stepped back every so often to do an in-depth series on such topics as the China’s urbanization — the biggest and most rapid move from the countryside to the cities in human history, on the potential for innovation in China, and on the ripple effects on Chinese society of the One Child Generation coming of age. Mary Kay’s seven-part series on that subject, called “Young China,” won a 2007 Overseas Press Club Award, one of several awards she has received.Mary Kay started out in Southeast Asia, based in Bangkok, as a regular contributor to NPR, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, and other news media. She covered the Cambodian civil war and the UN peace process, the Burmese army’s crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators and the United States’ wary rapprochement in the early ‘90s with Vietnam. Mary Kay also reported farther afield, covering the aftermath of genocide in Rwanda, tensions with Iraq in Kuwait, and other stories.Mary Kay became NPR’s full-time Southeast Asia correspondent in 1993, and in 1996 she opened NPR’s first Beijing bureau. She took time out for two fellowships at Harvard — a Nieman and a Radcliffe fellowship — enough time to realize China was too interesting a story to leave — before going back to China for The World.Mary Kay graduated from Northwestern University with a double major in journalism and history, and has an MA in international relations from the University of Sussex in England, completed on a Rotary Foundation Fellowship.
What’s behind China’s historic drop in population
Chinese expansion meets a civil conflict in Ethiopia
China and India: Rival powers
Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, left, is shown the way by Chinese President Xi Jinping before their meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing,China, April 24, 2019.
On China's New Silk Road
As Ethiopia’s civil conflict intensifies, the future for Chinese investment is uncertain
A demonstrator wearing a protective face mask with a message attends a protest demanding to boycott China-made products.
On China's New Silk Road
India guards against China’s growing regional plans
In this Oct. 31, 2019, file photo, attendees walk past a display for 5G services from Chinese technology firm Huawei at the PT Expo in Beijing.
On China's New Silk Road
China’s new Silk Road runs through cyberspace, worrying rivals and privacy advocates
The harbor of Nuuk, Greenland's capital.
China’s Arctic ambitions have revived US interest in the region
The Bridge of the Americas, located at the Pacific end of the Panama Canal.
On China's New Silk Road
China’s new Silk Road runs through Latin America, prompting warnings from the US
Sihanoukville, Cambodia, has become a construction site in recent years, with dozens of Chinese projects to build business and apartment high-rises, and with roads under construction around town.
On China's New Silk Road
Opening the door to Chinese investment comes with risks for Southeast Asian nations
Venice’s Grand Canal was for centuries a thoroughfare for the global shipping trade on the ancient Silk Road.
On China's New Silk Road
Italy is caught in the middle of the EU’s tussle with its ‘systemic rival,’ China
Kazakhs protest what they see as excessive expansion of Chinese influence in Kazakhstan, including new Silk Road investments, in Almaty, Kazakhstan, Dec. 2019.
On China's New Silk Road
China’s new Silk Road traverses Kazakhstan. But some Kazakhs are skeptical of Chinese influence.
A billboard advertising the "China dream" in Chengdu, China, in June 2019.
On China's New Silk Road
The ‘China dream’: The new Silk Road begins at home
A US Huey Cobra fires rockets at an enemy target in Ia Drang, October 1965.
Conflict
How the Vietnam War shaped my life and my career
Riding bicycles in Beijing's Houhai neighborhood
Global Politics
Are young Chinese liberalizing as China’s political leaders crack down?
Street scene in Rio de Janeiro
Economics
Brazil defies (positive) expectations
Economics
South Africa’s cautionary tale
Liu Xiaobo's empty chair at 2010 Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony in Oslo, Norway; Liu was in a Chinese prison.
Culture
Chinese Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiaobo remembered
Economics
It’s carpe diem time for China. What that might mean for the world.
Solar panels collect energy on a building in Dezhou, Shandong Province, China.
Economics
Why China’s embrace of renewable energy matters, and is more complicated than you think
Vision test, as part of VisionSpring's efforts to reach people in remote areas who need glasses.
Business
Bringing the world into focus for some of the 2 billion people globally who need glasses but don’t have them
A picture taken on April 3, 2014 in Maine-Soroa, eastern Niger, shows Nigerian people gathered at a camp for refugees who fled the fighting between the Nigerian army and Boko Haram.
Media
How a shortwave radio network is helping to counter Boko Haram
Chinese offer incense at a Buddhist temple in Wutaishan, China
Global Politics
If money can’t buy happiness, many Chinese now seek spiritiual meaning
Drew Sullivan, founder and editor of the Organized Crime & Corruption Project
Media
Disrupting the Kleptocrat’s Playbook, one investigative report at a time
Truth and Reconciliation
Culture
South Africa’s imperfect progress, 20 years after the Truth & Reconciliation Commission
Jedwabne
Culture
How a massacre of a village’s Jews by their neighbors in WWII Poland is remembered — and misremembered
Street scene in Amman, Jordan
Jobs
Why do so few women work (for pay) in Jordan?
Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive
Technology
Where to find what’s disappeared online, and a whole lot more: the Internet Archive
Saiko and Max Reynard, joining the San Francisco Women's March
Global Politics
Trump’s vision of America in the world isn’t so great, say critics at home and abroad
A man holds a sign for Republican presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson
Global Politics
America is divided — and that’s by design
The exhibition showcased the 30th anniversary of President Richard Nixon's historic visit to China in 1972.
Culture
Few love/hate relationships matter more than America’s with China
The World's team gathers in March 2003 to talk strategy in covering the war in Iraq
Media
Think you can predict the future? In the age of Trump, journalists offer a cautionary tale.
At the University of Michigan Engineering Center
Education
Why having more black leaders in science and tech will boost America’s future
Students' post-election sentiments on Northwestern University rock
Global Politics
In (?) We Trust
David Carroll, head of the Carter Center's Democracy Program
Global Politics
Echoes abroad of US election challenges at home
Dublin street scene
Conflict
Borders, belonging, identity, immigration and refugees in Ireland and Germany
East London street scene
Economics
Britain’s undergoing an identity crisis
Many of us take borders for granted,
Culture
An argument for (more) open borders
Nina Khrushcheva, great-granddaughter of former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, teaches propaganda at the New School in New York
Culture
Propaganda, American style: A Khrushchev’s perspective
Kochi (formerly Cochin), part of Kerala, which has embraced the Fab City movement
Development
India’s Kerala embraces Fab Labs and an ‘Internet of Things’ future
Shenzhen Maker Faire mobile display
Technology
The Maker Movement that was born in the USA has taken on Chinese characteristics
China's PLA
Conflict
An uneasy history of US-China conspiracy theories
Scene from Minnesota State Fair
Economics
What the rise of the gig economy means for the American Dream
A man carries an EU flag after Britain voted to leave the European Union, outside Downing Street in London.
Global Politics
Three smart takes on Europe’s future, from people living the change
Militant Islamist fighters from the self-named Islamic State take part in a military parade along the streets of northern Raqqa province.
Business
Why you should worry about where your oil (and gas) comes from
Smari McCarthy, information activist, cofounder of Iceland Pirate Party, helped process Panama Papers, as chief technology officer for the Organized Crime and Corruption Project
Global Politics
Panama Papers, ‘pirates,’ and an argument for how (some) data leaks can make the world a better place
Memorial to the dead on Tinian island, near Saipan, where US planes took off to drop nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945
Global Politics
Bridging divided wartime memories, President Obama’s visit to Hiroshima strikes a powerful chord
Entrepreneurs exchange ideas in Bangalore's government-funded Startup Warehouse
Health
India’s ‘Silicon Valley,’ Bangalore is fast becoming a serious global player
Thai soldier keeping watch at Erawan Shrine in central Bangkok.
Economics
Southeast Asia hopes a new common market will give it clout, but it may have a weak link in Thailand
Japanese schoolchildren in Tokyo
Culture
What China could learn from Japan’s experience
Betty Soskin, 94, the nation's oldest park ranger, at the Rosie the Riveter Museum in Richmond, California
Justice
How the Rosie the Riveter era changed America: an African-American woman’s story
Tahrir square protesters
Global Politics
Is global democracy in trouble? Or does it just feel like it?
Donald Trump has some harsh words for El Chapo
Global Politics
Got an authoritarian streak? Study says odds are, you’re for Trump.
Maya Ludtke, Chinese-born, adopted and raised by a Caucasian American mother, embraces both cultures
Culture
Born Chinese, raised American, an adoptee explores her identity
Rebecca MacKinnon, director of New America Foundation's "Ranking Digital Rights" project
Technology
Who’s messing with your Internet rights? And who’d tell you if they did?
Yangon street scene
Global Politics
Leapfrogging with smartphones, Myanmar joins the world
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un receives a delegation of the Communist Party of China led by Liu Yunshan in October of 2015.
Conflict
North Korea’s hydrogen bomb claims strain Beijing-Pyongyang relationship
Journalism students gather at Shantou University, in China's Guangdong province
Education
Bonus: Teaching China’s next generation of journalists to question everything
Peter Herford, former CBS producer and executive, & journalism teacher
Media
From JFK to Black Lives Matter, he’s seen journalism up close. And he’s more optimistic than ever about it.