Nina Agrawal
Nina Agrawal is a master's candidate at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs and Graduate School of Journalism. She interned at WLRN during the summer of 2015. Nina previously worked in education policy and as a writer and editor for the foreign policy magazine Americas Quarterly. She can't put down a good investigative story and has a deep and abiding love for public radio.
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Outside the Calvary Bible Alliance Church, Jean Celin holds court. Dressed in a smart black suit, headset cradling his neck and cell phone in hand,...
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Every Thursday night, Peggy Mustelier drives to the muggy, buggy edge of the Everglades to visit a man without a country. Or so it feels for Danyel...
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New York. Los Angeles. Aventura, Miami-Dade?The county may soon be joining a dozen cities and counties around the country that offer residents a local...
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Eldridge Williams grew up picking cotton in Texas. In 1942, he was commissioned as second lieutenant on Miami Beach, and then assigned to the Tuskegee...
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With the start of the new fiscal year on July 1st, a spate of laws is now in place in Florida. Among the many changes that went into effect was the...
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Every harvest season, sugar farmers in Florida light controlled fires to burn off the leaves on the sugar cane plant. Only the stalks remain, waiting to...
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Gov. Rick Scott's nearly half-billion dollars in budget vetoes this week included $2 million for the Underline, a park and bike and walking path planned...
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The Florida Supreme Court has ordered that Broward Circuit Judge Laura Marie Watson be removed from the bench, saying in an opinion that her actions as...
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Gov. Rick Scott was in South Florida Monday to help release three endangered sea turtles into the ocean. The loggerhead turtles had been rehabilitated...
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Last week, Gov. Rick Scott signed into law a bill protecting tenants living in foreclosed homes. The law was passed unanimously by both houses and takes...