Chris Herlinger

Chris Herlinger is international correspondent to Global Sisters Report and also writes on humanitarian and international issues for NCR. He has reported from South Sudan and Darfur, Sudan, as well as numerous other locales, including Haiti, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Israel and the Occupied Territories, Kenya and Ethiopia and Liberia. He is the co-author, with Paul Jeffrey, of books on Haiti and Darfur, published by Seabury, and a third, on global hunger, published in 2015.

By this Author

Sisters in Ukraine navigate 'a time full of terror' as Russian invasion continues

'We are afraid, but we are also strong': Stunned sisters worldwide watch as Russia invades Ukraine

Monday Starter: UISG introduces new logo and revamped website

Haiti enters 2022 facing a multitude of dangerous, daunting challenges

Monday Starter: In wake of voting rights defeat, calls for vigilance, engagement

Monday Starter: Ursuline Sisters sponsoring project to assist tornado survivors

Monday Starter: Seminar will focus on potential role of Catholic sisters in upcoming synod

For 2022, a pledge to help save the Hudson River, 'a precious and sacred being in our midst'

In 2021, GSR chronicled how sisters carried on amid challenges and danger

Q & A with Sr. Joan Brown, on the complexities of the shift to sustainability

As Afghan refugees restart their lives, US sisters do their part to help

Q & A with Sr. Patricia Ryan, defending Indigenous rights amid land exploitation

Rooted in values, sisters' farms grow connections to neighbors, the earth and just model of food production

Working farms highlight sisters' 'just relationships with all Creation'

After COP26, sisters pledge continued activism as 'an act of care'

Monday Starter: 7 congregations join divestment announcement ahead of COP26

In the face of catastrophic climate change, sisters join call for a just transition

Monday Starter: Sisters join interfaith event in support of Biden's 'Build Back Better' plan

Monday Starter: Loreto Sister honored by US State Department for anti-trafficking work participates in panel

Inequities in world's food system have only worsened during pandemic