Marina Lopes
About the Author
Marina Lopes is a Brazilian- American journalist who has written about feminism, caregiving, and motherhood across five continents. From 2016 through 2020, Marina covered Brazil for the Washington Post.
Her reporting took her from the remote corners of Brazil’s Amazon rainforest, where she interviewed female shamans challenging gender norms in their tribes, to Rio’s gang-controlled favelas, where she spoke to mothers who lost their children to gun violence. In Brazil’s Zika-infected northeast, she chronicled the devastation of the epidemic on families living in poverty. Her article on the spread of the Venezuelan diaspora in South America was nominated by the Washington Post for a Pulitzer Prize. She was also a 2019 recipient of an International Women’s Media Foundation Grant for her coverage of sex trafficking rings in the Amazon. Her 2018 series on how gay Brazilians confronted the rise of homophobia in Bolsonaro’s Brazil was nominated for a GLAAD award for outstanding newspaper article.
Before joining the Post, she was a correspondent for Reuters in Mozambique. Her work has been published by the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the BBC, PBS, Vice, and others. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband and two children.