Writing Here:

duckrabbit
David White
Ciara
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Peter
Sara Trula
Carl Pendle
Joni Karanka
Mike Lusmore
Julian Lass

What they say about duckrabbit:

'One of the hazards of publishing a well-known photojournalism blog - getting multimedia like yours, where the photos are both powerful and moving, and I end up in tears at my desk.'

Alan Taylor, Boston Big Picture)

'David White's multimedia work with duckrabbit is very exciting.'

Kate Edwards (Guardian Magazine Picture Editor)

'I am a fan of duckrabbit. I am not a fan because I agree with everything Ben has to say, but because he says it without frills and then will spend the time necessary to engage the consequent discussions. Such commitment is a priceless commodity.'

Prison Photography

'I met one of them at an academic conference in the summer. He was the sanest person there, but sure enough by damn gadnabbit ruffled more than a few fluffed up peacock feathers.'

The Photography Pages

'If you haven't seen the duckrabbit blog on multimedia you should.'

Stephen Alvarez

'duckrabbit has done another jaw-dropping job with Condition Critical, a highly commendable and important project for Medecins Sans Frontiers.'

The Travel Photographer

It's always good when someone who's work you really respect

turns out to be a really cool person in real life.

Anna  Stevens
is one such person. She heads up the multimedia effort over at PANOS PICTURES.  PANOS have some great photographers and an interesting approach to telling stories.  Maybe there is less ego involved in PANOS than some other agencies but they do seem more interested in telling human stories than trading on tired representations of conflict and suffering.

All that is to say that Anna will be showing PANOS’s work on Saturday at  PHOTOGRAPHY STILL MOVING.  It’s a great opportunity to learn from one of the best producers working with photography in the UK.

Tuvalu – Islands on the frontline of Climate Change from panos pictures on Vimeo.

With photography by Robin Hammond and produced by Panos Pictures, this multimedia piece looks at the island nation of Tuvalu, as the Tuvaluan people become some of the first environmental refugees, a direct result of man-made climate change.

In December this year a treaty to replace the Kyoto protocol will be drawn up at the climate change conference in Copenhagen. At a preliminary summit in March, scientists presented new information that revised previous estimates of future sea level rise. The new figures suggest that by the end of the century the oceans could be one metre or more above their current levels. Coastal regions will be flooded and low-lying nations such as the tiny South Pacific country of Tuvalu could be submerged.

The impact of rising seas and the increase in extreme weather events can already be seen in Tuvalu. It is one of 22 Pacific island nations with 7 million inhabitants between them that contribute only 0.06% of global greenhouse gas emissions but are three times more vulnerable to climate change than countries in the North.

At the primary school in Funafuti, children are taught about climate change from the age of six. They are also learning what it means to emigrate, because this could be the last generation of children to grow up in Tuvalu. Its people are already in flight. More than 4,000 live in New Zealand, and the Tuvaluan government is planning the migration of the remaining 10,000.

Please credit Panos Pictures
To see more of Panos Pictures work go to www.panos.co.uk

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1 comment to It’s always good when someone whose work you really respect

  • Thank you for a most excellent day yesterday. Have found wireless & in process of posting my notes. You two (three, four) are an inspiration. Cliche, I know, but all the some, true…