Rupa ShenoyRS

Rupa Shenoy

ReporterThe World
Rupa Shenoy is a former reporter for The World. Rupa also created and hosted the podcast Otherhood, based in The World newsroom. She was previously a daily and investigative reporter for Boston Public Radio, and, before that, Minnesota Public Radio, where her reporting on the indefinite detention of civilly committed sex offenders contributed to the state Supreme Court ruling the program unconstitutional.Before making the move to broadcast, Rupa worked at The Associated Press, covering major national events like the arrest of former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, the murders of Jennifer Hudson's family members, and the election of Barack Obama.Rupa also reported for the Daily Herald, the third-largest Illinois newspaper, where she broke the story of a Superfund site that had been insufficiently remediated, causing high cancer rates in a surrounding neighborhood. She started out as an investigative reporter for the race-and-poverty-focused magazine The Chicago Reporter.Rupa has a master's degree from Northwestern University's Medill School. 
UN Human Rights Council moves to monitor police 
US human trafficking report elicits anger 
Concerns about new Biden domestic extremism plan
UN rights chief releases report sparked by George Floyd’s death
28th anniversary of white extremists’ attack in South Africa
The city that hosts the largest US Confederate monument holds its first Juneteenth
New Dutch slavery exhibit part of a global revamp of museums 
Charges dropped against doctor accused of starting outbreak 
Biden approves aid for Egypt without human rights restrictions
A new movement to recognize the right to food 
Caste discrimination in California
New Zealand one year after Floyd killing
How the debate over giving Biden Communion may impact the world
Twitter bans actor Kangana Ranaut, angering Indian government
Proud Boys disband in Canada
CBP ramps up efforts to fight forced labor
International report accuses US of crimes against humanity
Global religious freedom takes a hit
Challenges to reform with militarization of police
Pakistan mourns its ‘father of human rights’
Stranded Australians fight to go home
Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark dies at 93
IMF warns of 2-speed global recovery
New hope for domestic workers
Jesuits and descendants of enslaved people reflect on landmark agreement
Canadian groups seek to bridge gap between communities and police on hate crimes
US and UN Human Rights Council signal new stance on Egypt
New Biden administration strategy to combat corruption 
Pressure builds on US over ICC sanctions
WTO head Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala makes history
UN Human Rights Council starts its regular session
The French debate Algerian colonial history 
COVID-19 racial data backfires for some vulnerable communities
Biden’s pick for US ambassador to the UN testifies 
Civil rights groups oppose proposed domestic terrorism laws 
Trump’s legacy of unity 
Kazakhstan joins growing number of countries to ban capital punishment
The US draws a new red line for China in Tibet
What law enforcement considers a threat 
Calls to investigate Baloch activist’s death in Canada
Breakthroughs in the Uighur struggle for justice
10 years after the Arab uprisings, Egyptian human rights activists dare not speak
A new international inquiry into US police violence
Trump’s last Human Rights Week
COVID-19 drives an increase in hunger that hits women hardest
The future of the State Department
Australia acknowledges war crimes 
The UN reviews the US
What the Biden-Harris win means for Modi
A Christian nun, center, holds a placard and shouts slogans with others demanding the release of tribal rights activist Stan Swamy and other activists during a demonstration in Bengaluru, India, Nov. 12, 200.
Human rights
Indian activists hope elderly priest’s death marks a turning point for human rights in India
A worker wearing a yellow safety hat inspects disposable blue gloves at a factory.
Human rights
US human trafficking report elicits anger from several countries
Supporters of President Donald Trump climb the West wall of the the US Capitol in Washington
Extremism
Critics say Biden’s plan to combat domestic extremism repeats past mistakes
Hands hold a round white cloth circle with George Floyd's face in the middle that reads, "Justice 4 all stolen lives"
Race
Report: UN rights chief Bachelet calls for states to ‘stop denying and start dismantling racism’
Tourists at the mingling with Stone Mountain and colorful trees in the background
History
Stone Mountain — home to the largest Confederate monument in the US — is celebrating its first Juneteenth
Tronco, or multiple foot stocks used to to constrain enslaved people
History
The Netherlands hosts a new slavery exhibit, as historical debates continue