News

February 20, 2026

Peace Corps Launches Tech Prosperity Corps Initiative

Today, the Peace Corps announced a new initiative, called Tech Prosperity Corps, to “recruit, train and deploy skilled Americans to support the adoption of artificial intelligence in Peace Corps host countries participating in the American AI Exports Program.” The initiative was announced at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 by Michael Kratsios, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology. According to acting Peace Corps Director Richard E. Swarttz, “By building technical capacity, supporting AI adoption across critical use cases, and addressing barriers to last-mile AI implementation, Tech Prosperity Corps volunteers will leverage American AI to expand access...

February 20, 2026

Black Peace Corps Journeys: Designing a Life After Service

A Look into the Black Peace Corps Experience By Arabella Estes The culminating event for the Museum of the Peace Corps Experience’s Peace by Design exhibit highlighted not only the humanity behind Peace Corps service, but also honed in on the experiences of one group, Black Peace Corps Volunteers.  On Friday, February 13th, Returned Peace Corps Volunteers (RPCVs) met to share a range of perspectives on the experiences, both during and after their service, at “Black Peace Corps Journeys: Designing a Life After Service.”  Hosted at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library and intended to commemorate both Black History...

Photo of Capitol Hill. Source: Pixabay. Film Team Washington. Washington, DC.
February 4, 2026

NPCA Statement on Final Congressional Action on FY 2026 Peace Corps Funding

February 4, 2026 - Yesterday, the House of Representatives passed the Senate Amendment to H.R. 7148, the Consolidated Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (FY 2026). The funding package includes appropriations for the Peace Corps and other international programs. While the Trump administration had proposed level funding of $430.5 million for the Peace Corps, both the House and Senate settled on a five percent, $20 million reduction in funding for the current fiscal year, which runs through September 30th. This funding level for the agency’s operations is nearly equal to the $410 million allotted in 2016, which represents less than 0.1% of...

January 30, 2026

Leadership Announcement at Peace Corps

Richard Swarttz has been appointed Acting Peace Corps Director by the administration until a permanent Director is nominated by the President, confirmed by the United States Senate, and sworn in for duty. Mr. Swarttz was previously appointed by the White House to serve as the Chief Financial Officer of the Peace Corps in 2018-2021. Mr. Swarttz brings over 35 years of experience in senior leadership across the nonprofit, information technology, and manufacturing industries. At Peace Corps, he spent almost three years as part of the senior management team, where his role was strategic planning and policy-making decisions. NPCA would like...

January 18, 2026

Martin Luther King Jr. and the Peace Corps

By Mike Roman, Kiribati 00-02 In the early 1960s, as the world trembled between hope and fear, Martin Luther King Jr. spoke not only to America, but to humanity. He spoke of a beloved community—a world bound together not by power, but by justice, dignity, and mutual care. While his voice echoed through churches, city streets, and the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, another idea was taking shape alongside his dream: the belief that peace could be built through service. When the Peace Corps was founded in 1961, it carried a quiet kinship with King’s vision. Young Americans were asked...

December 31, 2025

Arrest Is Not Rescue — And This Narrative Harms Survivors

By Stephanie Richard, Ukraine (98-00)   During human trafficking awareness month, I wanted to write to ask PCVs and RPCVs to think critically about what human trafficking looks like and the contrasting public perspective of it. My name is Stephanie Richard, and I am an RCPV Ukraine (1998-2000) and the recent recipient of the Sargent Shriver Award for Distinguished Humanitarian Service. I am the Director of the Sunita Jain Anti-Trafficking Initiative at Loyola Law School, and I currently teach law students and conduct research and writing on the complex intersectional solutions that can prevent human trafficking and increase access to...

December 22, 2025

New Grad School Programs for RPCVs

Call to Attention By Ty Dávila, Research Contributor at the New Lines Institute Over the last few months, the University of Maine and Michigan State University have launched initiatives benefiting former Peace Corps volunteers who served in any part of the world. These programs recognize the valuable skills and perspectives that returned volunteers bring from their international service. Below are details about each program. These new fellowships include embedded professional development opportunities and networking events tailored to the unique experiences of RPCVs. By participating, former volunteers can leverage their service to advance their careers or further their education while staying connected to...

December 19, 2025

Where Prevention Becomes Personal: An Intern’s Reflection on Peace Corps, HIV Prevention, and the Stories that Endure

By Julia Ngo Peace Corps matters because it operates where public health is most fragile: in communities where trust must be earned, resources are limited, and prevention depends on relationships, not just interventions. Through its partnership with the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the Peace Corps has helped extend HIV prevention, education, and care into communities across more than 50 countries. PEPFAR’s success is often measured in lives saved and infections prevented. Peace Corps’ contribution is measured in something harder to quantify but no less vital: sustained presence, cultural understanding, and local empowerment. As we observe AIDS Awareness...

December 1, 2025

The Right to Care: Health and Humanity Amid War in Ukraine

By Yana Panfilova & Helen Petrozzola December is Universal Human Rights Month and reminds us that health is not a privilege or a service extended out of goodwill—it is a universal right. Yet in war-torn Ukraine, that right is being tested daily. Frequent power outages, attacks on critical infrastructure, and the ongoing displacement of millions have made even basic healthcare a struggle to sustain. As war continues to uproot millions, the destruction of healthcare facilities, the disruption of treatment supplies, and the growing psychological toll all reveal a more profound truth: vulnerability does not arise from illness or circumstance alone,...

December 1, 2025

How Peace Corps and HIV Wove Our Lives Together 

By Helen Petrozzola I didn’t know where the Peace Corps would send me — only that it would be somewhere I needed to be. That was the unspoken pact: trust the process, step into the unknown, and give everything you can to the people and place you meet. Ukraine became my home, and the people I met there became my family in every sense of the word. In late summer 1998, Peace Corps Group 13 boarded a bus from Kyiv to Cherkasy for three months of training. We stumbled through new words and customs, all of us wondering where we’d...

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