David L. Stern

GlobalPost

David L. Stern  previously covered the former Soviet Union and the Black Sea region for GlobalPost. A journalist for more than 18 years, Stern started out as a television news producer in Moscow, covering, among a multitude of other stories, two attempted coups, the breakup of the Soviet Union, the transition to a market economy, war in Chechnya and Russia’s first democratic presidential elections as an independent country in 1996. In 1998 he made the jump to print journalism and moved to Baku, Azerbaijan, first to work as the Caucasus correspondent for Agence France-Presse, and then as Caucasus and Central Asia correspondent for the Financial Times. In 2003 he was awarded a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University. Since 2007, Stern has worked with the New York Times in Central Asia, writing about the oil economy in Kazakhstan, fortune tellers in Tajikistan and the murder of an independent journalist in Kyrgyzstan. He resides in Kiev, Ukraine, where he is a freelance correspondent.


The World

Financial crisis halts Central Asia’s economic boom

As oil revenues and easy capital dry up in Russia and Kazakhstan, the incomes of emigrant workers from Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan shrink

The World

Politicians’ fate could hinge on the weather

The World

For Which It Stands: Ukraine

Politics
The World

The gas crisis: winners and losers

The World

Victory: Tymoshenko

The World

The US path to Afghanistan now runs through Central Asia

Politics

Worried about Taliban pressure on its supply line to Afghanistan, the US turns to ex-Soviet republics.

The World

Manas Air Base: A Pyrrhic victory?

Politics

Did Kyrgyzstan decide to kick U.S. forces out of a strategic air base for the money, and how much will it get?

The World

Why the air base debate drags on

Politics

After the Kyrgyzstan government orders the US to evacuate Manas air base, US Defense Secretary Gates remains hopeful.

The World

Is Saakashvili in trouble?

Politics

Opposition to Georgia’s president emerges.

The World

How the Baltics melted down

The “three D’s” could spell out a worst-case scenario for Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.