EXPOSURE, the center for photojournalism, documentary studies, and human-rights at Tufts University, and the Institute for Global Leadership are proud to present Images from the Field II: Institute Student and Alumni Work. The most recent installation of this ongoing exhibition series includes work from 19 current students and recent alumni associated with the Institute for Global Leadership. Exhibited in the Slater Concourse in Aidekman Arts Center in conjunction with the national launch of Vanishing by Antonin Kratochvil, Images from the Field II highlights global research initiatives undertaken by current students and recent alumni. This is EXPOSURE's fourth exhibition at Tufts University and is presented in collaboration with de.MO and VII Photo Agency.
EXPOSURE extends its deep appreciation to the following for their dedication to the nurturing and developing of this exhibition and human rights and the photojournalism center...
James Nachtwey, five-time winner of the Robert Capa Gold Medal and cofounder of VII Photo Agency, for his compelling and powerful work and for his great confidence in this project;
Stan Grossfeld, two-time Pulitzer Prize winning photographer of the Boston Globe, for his compassionate eye, his selfless mentoring of our students and for the intellectual authorship of this project;
Giorgio Baravalle, designer, publisher and cofounder of de.MO, for his iconoclasm, intellectual and aesthetic insight, and warmth;
VII, for its courage and humane convictions.
EXPOSURE is deeply appreciative of the generous support of the following who have made this installation possible: Robert & JoAnn Bendetson, Jonathan Duskin & Michael Zimmerman, John and Randi Lapidus, Bruce M. Male, Lorenz and Laura Reibling, Gene & Anja. Rosenberg, Rick Wayne, and John and Cathy White.
In Mbarara, Uganda, life continues with little acknowledgement of the thousands of refugees just half an hour away in the Nakivale Refugee Camp. Citizens of Uganda must deal with globalization permeating their agrarian based society.
Because many refugee children have been orphaned as a result of the conflict they are escaping, the whole community often takes responsibility for their care and upbringing.
A Somali Bantu refugee rests his hands as he waits to distribute cornmeal at the food distribution center. The food is necessary, but not necessarily sufficient - doctors with the International Organization of Migration (IOM) estimate that half the children at the camp are malnourished. Violence over what little food exists is common between the refugees and the local pastoralist population, called Turkana.
Large nationalistic murals once dominated the visual landscape of Tehran. Created in the early days of the Islamic Republic, they typically disparaged the U.S. and Israel, and were written in both Farsi and English. Now, they compete for attention with equally-sized modern advertisements for skin care products and the like.
On the first Friday after Eid-al-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan, horsemen, or "chapandars," gather for the season's first game of Buzkashi in Kunduz city in the northeast of Afghanistan. Originating with the nomadic tribes of Central Asia, Buzkashi is played predominantly in the northern regions of the country, where it has re-emerged since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Played either individually or in teams, the object is to carry a calf carcass - weighing as much as 100kg - into a circle in the field in exchange for prizes.
Afghanistan is the world's largest producer of opium, accounting for 87 percent of the global total in 2004. Three years after the Bonn Agreement, illegal drugs represent 60 percent of GDP and risk transforming the country into a narco-state, threatening the nascent peace and stability that have emerged after over two decades of war. Badakshan province, of which Faizabad is the capital, is the third largest area under cultivation in the country.
During the summer of 2003, I lived in Cuba for part of the summer researching for my Senior Honors Thesis, The Health Care Status of Cuban Women. La Rampa is famous street in the neighborhood of Vedado, Havana where the classic cars and buildings made me feel as if I had traveled back in time to 1950.
Boy in Hebron, West Bank. This photo is from the NIMEP trip, January 2004, a delegation of students and professors that traveled to Israel and the West Bank to learn about the complex issues surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict firsthand. Hebron is a city holy to both Jews and Muslims, and a divisive area of land in any future peace process.
Located 15 km from Cape Town's city center and seen here backed by Table Mountain, this sprawling, poverty-stricken township is home to over one million residents. Langa was established in 1948 in accordance with the segregation policies of apartheid, which forcibly resettled black South Africans to townships on the city's outskirts. This picture was taken during the Institute for International Mediation and Conflict Resolution (IIMCR) Africa Symposium in Cape Town, South Africa.
A corn field on a bright winter day on the Nebraska plain. Today, corn, soy, and wheat fields cover what was once rolling grassland. Deceptively natural, modern production agriculture is mechanized and intentional--anything but an accident of nature.
A home on the Nebraska plains stands against the bleak winter sky. The native prarie grasses surrounding this house are an island amidst a sea of groomed fields. Ironically, the native grasses were intentionally planted and carefully tended. They are a reminder of the American Frontier and days long past.
This is a water system that is used to purify water is a rural town, Los Olivos, which is located outside La Esperanza, Honduras. Save the Children is currently implementing water systems such as this one in the rural communities to decrease the number of water-borne illnesses.
Siuna is a small rural town in the autonomous region of Nicaragua that used to thrive around a prosperous gold mine. An American mining company took over the gold production and removed the gold from the area without giving any money to the community. All the company left behind was impoverished living conditions, hunger, and water contaminated to toxic levels.
This photograph was taken in paraje Cambaicol Bajo, aldea Las Lomas of San Martin Jilotepeque, Chimaltenango, Guatemala during a three-month research project into local-level reconciliation processes in Guatemala. Photographed is a body of a man who was killed during the internal armed conflict and later buried in a clandestine grave. His body was exhumed by the non-governmental organization Forensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala (FAFG) twenty-two years after his death.
The Aladza (="Multicolored") Mosque in the Drina River town of Foca in eastern Bosnia-Herzegovina. Built in 1551 by Hasan Nazir, a Bosnian Muslim native of Foca, the Aladza Mosque was considered one of the masterworks of southeastern Europe's Islamic architectural heritage. The mosque was famous for its harmonious proportions and its colorful painted interior. Photo taken in the 1980s.
Empty site of the Aladza Mosque in Foca, six months after the end of the 1992-1995 war. The outlines of the foundations can still be traced among the weeds. The circle of shattered marble fragments is the remains of the mosque's ablution fountain. In 1992, Foca was overrun by Serb nationalist forces, who rounded up the town's Muslim residents (60% of the population before the war), killed hundreds of them, and kept the Muslim women and girls locked up in the town's athletic center which was turned into a rape camp. All 14 mosques in Foca were blown up and their ruins razed.
Buenos Aires, Argentina, businessman in counter-strike. The week after an attack on the legislature by the Piqueteros and other affiliated organizations, the government workers counter the violence with a symbolic "hug" around the building to demonstrate their opposition to the movement's aggression.
Police form to monitor the Piquetero protests planned for that afternoon. Due to several recent cases of police brutality towards the members of the Piquetero movements, President Kirchner ordered a mandate of "no tolerance" for repression. The police have to enclose the entire government center of Buenos Aires with barricades. They are then within the confines and the Piqueteros are outside. For those few hours, about 15 blocks of the busiest part of the city are open only for residents, workers and media.
These three sisters were watching as my husband and I walked by their home. We were visiting the village of Kulalar, a settlement of 900 people located in the province of Manisa in Western Turkey, to learn about traditional weaving culture of Anatolia. Nearby the city of U_ak has been one of the most famous sources of hand-woven rugs since the 15th century when textiles from the region were first exported to European nobility as gifts from the Ottoman court and, then, as sought-after status symbols.
This photograph was taken during the first official visit of American students to the Islamic Republic of Iran since 1979. Organized at the Institute for Global Leadership, and comprised of both Tufts undergraduates and Fletcher graduate students, the small group toured sites throughout Iran and interviewed a variety of students, professors, academics, artists, and practitioners throughout Tehran, Shiraz, Isfahan, and Qom.
Gas Flare at INEMAKA's Kaki oil field. This is a photograph of a gas flare at an oil well managed by INEMAKA. Whenever oil is pumped, natural gas is also extracted. Most facilities in Venezuela do not have the capacity to compress this gas, instead, they burn it. The equivalent of two thousand barrels of oil a day are flared at this field because Petroleos de Venezuela (PdVSA) has not developed the proper facilities to compress and liquify the gas that is associated with oil production.
The photograph is taken in Lahore on my one day off from work. Generally, I am pretty much the 'walk around the city and discover it' kind of girl, but given that I had only this single day to see things other than those that made the view on my ride to and from the inside of lawyers' offices, guess what I did?
This photograph was taken in a restaurant in the town of Suchitoto following a meeting with a former leader of El Salvador's guerrilla forces. It overlooks the hills of Guasapa, where some of the worst fighting occurred during the civil war.