How the discovery of a long-lost monument shattered the trust between a Japanese American community and the museum built to preserve their history.
Kori Suzuki
Kori Suzuki is a reporter and visual journalist at KPBS, the NPR station in San Diego, California. His grandparents are survivors of the Minidoka and Jerome incarceration camps in Idaho and Arkansas. Instagram: @korisuzukiphoto
After losing his sight, the Tijuana River Estuary offered other ways to see
Ron Peterson, a volunteer at the estuary, now leads nature walks presenting a unique way to experience the wetlands.
California’s Central Valley chinook are getting lost on their way home
The culprit is a tactic designed to save them – one that could decrease the species’ resilience in the long run.
EPA to investigate claims of civil rights violations in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
Tribes and environmental justice groups say management of the Delta harms traditional food systems and causes pollution.
The fight to keep Ohtani basketball alive
Increasing housing costs and the pandemic threaten an important tradition in the Japanese American community.
