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Various Panos photographers at Angkor Photo Festival & Workshops

Vlad Sokhin will have an outdoor exhibition with a part of his long term project on climate change entitled Warm Waters,
here focusing on the island nation of Kiribati.

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Warm Waters featured on Lens Culture

Images from Kiribati that are part of my long-term ongoing project “Warm Waters” about climate change in the Pacific are featured on Lens Culture.

These images will be exhibited during Angkor photo festival in Siem Reap, Cambodia in December 2015.

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Exhibition in Suwon Photo Festival

‘Two Faces of the Thunder Dragon’ story from Bhutan is exhibited at Suwon International Photo Festival, South Korea. The exhibition will be up from November 1st to 15th.

Warm Waters at the 8×8 Photo Festival in Ireland

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Images from ‘Warm Waters’ exhibited with other photos of Panos photographers at the 8×8 Photo Festival in Dublin, Ireland. Panos Pictures supported the festival to develop a photo exhibition to raise awareness of global issues among university students in Ireland.

Violence, Almost Unspeakable, Made Visible

Laurence Cornet from Blink asked me a few questions about working on human rights projects and collaborating with the UN and NGOs:

Violence, Almost Unspeakable, Made Visible

Crying Meri

 

 

Vlad Sokhin speaks at the Social Good Summit Australia

The Social Good Summit Australia is a one-day conference examining the impact of social good initiatives around the world. Held on October 10th 2015 in Sydney, the Social Good Summit Australia unites a dynamic community of global and local leaders and grassroots contributors to discuss solutions for the greatest challenges of our time.

Vlad was invited to the Social Good Summit to present his work on human rights and climate change in Asia-Pacific.

SGS

 

‘Warm Waters’ in French L’Obs magazine

Photos from Vlad’s ongoing long-term project “Warm Waters” about climate change in the Pacific was published in L’Obs magazine (France).

Photo-essay from Nauru and Manus Island on Meduza

A story on how the Australian Government treating asylum seekers and refugees on Manus Island (PNG) and in Nauru, published on Meduza Project (in Russian) The photos also show victims of the police brutality in other parts of Papua New Guinea, the country were refugees are supposed to be resettled permanently.

 

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Cargo Cults of Melanesia in July issue of Portuguese travel magazine “Volta ao Mundo”.