“Behind the Reporting: Pablo Albarenga and Ana Maria Arévalo” presented with The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
“Behind the Reporting: Pablo Albarenga and Ana Maria Arévalo” presented with The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
BEHIND THE REPORTING: PABLO ALBAREGNA AND ANA MARIA ARÉVALO
presented with The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
Featuring Pablo Albarenga, Ana Maria Arévalo, and moderated by Marina Walker Guevara
Photoville 2020 Talks On-demand recordings are made possible in partnership with PhotoWIngs with additional support by the Philip and Edith Leonian Foundation
Indigenous peoples throughout the Amazon rainforest are acting to protect their territories, their traditions, and rich biodiversity. They are combining technology and ancestral knowledge to foster a creative and alternative way to preservation and survival, in spite of the many threats of destruction they face.
In Venezuela, female imprisonment entails waiting for years—under cramped and deplorable conditions—before moving on to trial and being judged. Will these women ever be able to return to society upon release? What do their conditions tell us about the state of the Venezuelan society?
Pulitzer Center grantees Pablo Albarenga and Ana Maria Arévalo Gosen, in conversation with Marina Walker Guevara, discuss their approaches to photographing marginalized communities.
photoville.nyc/online/behind-the-reporting-pablo-albarenga-and-ana-maria-arevalo/
presented with The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
Featuring Pablo Albarenga, Ana Maria Arévalo, and moderated by Marina Walker Guevara
Photoville 2020 Talks On-demand recordings are made possible in partnership with PhotoWIngs with additional support by the Philip and Edith Leonian Foundation
Indigenous peoples throughout the Amazon rainforest are acting to protect their territories, their traditions, and rich biodiversity. They are combining technology and ancestral knowledge to foster a creative and alternative way to preservation and survival, in spite of the many threats of destruction they face.
In Venezuela, female imprisonment entails waiting for years—under cramped and deplorable conditions—before moving on to trial and being judged. Will these women ever be able to return to society upon release? What do their conditions tell us about the state of the Venezuelan society?
Pulitzer Center grantees Pablo Albarenga and Ana Maria Arévalo Gosen, in conversation with Marina Walker Guevara, discuss their approaches to photographing marginalized communities.
photoville.nyc/online/behind-the-reporting-pablo-albarenga-and-ana-maria-arevalo/
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