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NGO Work: Singles

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  • Liton works at a farm in Narayanganj, Bangladesh.
  • Nathi poses is seen in her home June 26, 2017 in Udaipur,  India. Photo by Allison Joyce
  • Sumaiya poses for a photo with her mother December 9, 2021 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
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  • Students play outside the classroom December 9, 2021 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
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  • Kids play a volleyball game at Kamrieng school March 30, 2019 in Kamrieng , Cambodia.
  • Sumaiya is seen at school December 7, 2021 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
  • Rusmot Ali works on their fish farm in Mymensingh, Bangladesh
  • at a Marie Stopes outreach day in Kishoreganj district, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce for Marie Stopes
  • Sahina Khatum and researchers Mohammad Saidur Rahman and Madhu Sudon Dey work on a fish farm in Mymensingh, Bangladesh
  •  Yeoun Soon works March 30, 2019 in Kamrieng , Cambodia. Yeoun Soon is 24 and unmarried. She’s been working for HALO for 6 years. She works as a Hstamit operator and her salary supports both her and her dad and sick mother, and helps with her mothers healthcare bills. She says “I feel excited that I can help support my parents”.
  • The team exits the field March 30, 2019 in Kamrieng , Cambodia.
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  • Afsana poses for a photo at KKS school near the brothel July 18, 2018 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Afsana, aged 10, lives in the brothel with her mother Tuli and her five-year-old brother Selim. Afsana loves school and is the second best student in grade three, despite her difficult living conditions. She loves studying Bangla and singing traditional songs but games in the playground with her best friend Razia are her greatest source of joy. She dreams of finishing school and finding a job to take her family out of the brothel. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
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  • DHAKA, BANGLADESH - JUNE 10:  A woman takes a bath next to polluted a canal that leads to the Buriganga river in Shyampur June 10, 2018 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Bangladesh has been reportedly ranked 10th out of the top 20 plastic polluter in the world with the Buriganga river known as one of the most polluted rivers in the country due to rampant dumping of industrial and human waste. Like many developing countries, Bangladesh lacks the infrastructure to effectively manage their waste which causes problems in keeping the waters safe for human and aquatic lives while dozens of tanneries on the banks of the river contribute industrial waste into the ground water. As June 5 was marked by the United Nations as World Environment Day, Buriganga symbolizes the general state of many rivers in Bangladesh, with the growing levels of pollutants and plastic waste consuming up all oxygen in the river and affecting our seafood while fishes consume bits of plastic which mimics their natural food sources and eventually lands on our dinner table. (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)
  • Sudha Agarrwal does outreach in a village, March 30, 2018 in Madhya Pradesh, India. Photo by Allison Joyce
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  • Sumaiya walks to school with her mother December 7, 2021 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
  • Tohan is seen at school December 9, 2021 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
  • UN Women Executive Director, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka meets with Deloara and her family at her shop in Ukhiya  January 31, 2018 in Chittagong district, Bangladesh. UN Women/Allison Joyce
  • Pooja Sharma is seen at the Family Planning office in Gwalior, March 29, 2018 in Madhya Pradesh, India. Photo by Allison Joyce
  • in Rajasthan, India. Photo by Allison Joyce/Girls Not Brides
  • DHAKA, BANGLADESH - JUNE 10:  A girl holds a baby next to a polluted canal that leads to the Buriganga river in Shyampur June 10, 2018 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Bangladesh has been reportedly ranked 10th out of the top 20 plastic polluter in the world with the Buriganga river known as one of the most polluted rivers in the country due to rampant dumping of industrial and human waste. Like many developing countries, Bangladesh lacks the infrastructure to effectively manage their waste which causes problems in keeping the waters safe for human and aquatic lives while dozens of tanneries on the banks of the river contribute industrial waste into the ground water. As June 5 was marked by the United Nations as World Environment Day, Buriganga symbolizes the general state of many rivers in Bangladesh, with the growing levels of pollutants and plastic waste consuming up all oxygen in the river and affecting our seafood while fishes consume bits of plastic which mimics their natural food sources and eventually lands on our dinner table. (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)
  • Manju Rana poses for a photo in Beraja village , March 29, 2018 in Madhya Pradesh, India. Photo by Allison Joyce
  • Sahina Khatum works on their fish farm in Mymensingh, Bangladesh
  • in Rajasthan, India. Photo by Allison Joyce/Girls Not Brides
  • Pinky Joshi works in her shop  June 26, 2017 in Udaipur,  India. Photo by Allison Joyce
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  • Street scene in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
  • in Rajasthan, India. Photo by Allison Joyce/Girls Not Brides
  • 6.5 year old Roni has surgery by Dr Nazrul at Khulna hospital March 2, 2017 in Khulna division, Bangladesh. © Sightsavers/Allison Joyce
  • Pinky Joshi works in her shop with her husband Rakesh Joshi June 26, 2017 in Udaipur,  India. Photo by Allison Joyce
  • Arafat and his father Sumaru walk home after surgery in Jibonnagar in Horinakundu, Jhenaidah March 3, 2017 in Khulna division, Bangladesh. © Sightsavers/Allison Joyce
  • Mosamad Muslima Khatum plays with her baby sister while her mother looks on at her home in Govindapur, Satkhira in Khulna division, Bangladesh.
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  • photo by Allison Joyce
  • PABNA, BANGLADESH - May 20:  Children attend class in a  solar powered {quote}floating school{quote} operated by Shidhulai Swanirvar Sangstha May 20, 2014 in Pabna district, Bangladesh. About 3 million people live on geographically isolated islands, known as {quote}chors{quote}, with no roads, no electricity, and no medical facilities. Every year, the nation is inundated with monsoonal rains which can flood up to two thirds of the country. Approximately 10 million people live in parts of Bangladesh lying less than a meter above current sea levels. (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)
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  • Dr Asif Hannan checks patients during an eye health screening in Sharsha upazila of Jessore district February 26, 2017 in Khulna division, Bangladesh. © Sightsavers/Allison Joyce
  • LALMONIRHAT DISTRICT, BANGLADESH - JULY 9: Bash Kata Indian enclave resident, Musamat Lipi, stands for a photo after choosing Bangladeshi citizenship with the Enclaves Exchange Coordination Committee July 9, 2015 in Lalmonirhat District, Bangladesh. Lipi says that she is happy her son can go to school legally, now that they have citizenship. The India–Bangladesh enclaves, also known as the chitmahals, are 162 parcels of land, each of which happens to lie on the wrong side of the India/Bangladesh border. There are 111 such Indian enclaves in Bangladesh and 51 Bangladeshi enclaves in India. On June 6th Bangladesh and India came to an agreement to let residents choose which country they want to belong to, and on July 31st these enclaves will dissolve into the country already surrounding them. For decades, these people have been stateless. Both the Bangladesh and Indian governments have refused to take responsibility for the enclave residents. Their villages do without public services, they cannot vote, and parents must forge documents to send their children to schools. Until the Enclaves Exchange Coordination Committee came to their enclaves this month, most Indian enclaves residents had never laid eyes on an Indian national before. (Photo by Shazia Rahman/Getty Images)
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  • in Rajasthan, India. Photo by Allison Joyce/Girls Not Brides
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  • 11 year old Rashed is examined before surgery at Khulna hospital March 1, 2017 in Khulna division, Bangladesh. © Sightsavers/Allison Joyce
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  • Arafat is seen with his father Sumaru after surgery at Khulna hospital March 3, 2017 in Khulna division, Bangladesh. © Sightsavers/Allison Joyce
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  • photo by Allison Joyce
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  • LADAKH, INDIA - JUNE 13:  Students joke around while they study in their dorms at the Shachukul Monastery school, which is reliant on solar energy, in Chosling village on June 13, 2017 in Ladakh, India. Speaking two days after US President Donald Trump announced plans to withdraw from the Paris agreement on climate change, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that India was “part of the world’s shared heritage” and that India would “continue working...above and beyond the Paris accord”. India saw nearly $10 billion invested, both in 2015 and in 2016, in renewable energy projects.  (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)
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  • Children play at the KKS school near the brothel July 18, 2018 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
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  • People watch a play in Beraja village , March 29, 2018 in Madhya Pradesh, India. Photo by Allison Joyce
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  • Mohammad Abdul Karim has surgery at Jessore hospital February 27, 2017 in Khulna division, Bangladesh. © Sightsavers/Allison Joyce
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  • Students play outside the classroom December 9, 2021 in Daulatdia, Bangladesh. Photo by Allison Joyce / Save The Children
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  • Intro
  • Portraits
  • Photojournalism
    • Singles
    • Circus
      • India's Rambo Circus
      • Growing up in the Bangladesh Circus
    • The Bangladesh Surf Girls
    • The Hijra Village of Bangladesh
    • Eid During Covid
    • Child Marriage & Sex Trafficking in Bangladesh
    • Sri Lanka's Missing
    • The Scars of War
    • The School For Child Brides
    • Meghalaya; Where Women Rule
    • Thailand's Sex Workers
    • Rohingya
      • Singles
      • Rape Survivors Speak Out
      • The Widow's Village
      • Child Marriage
      • "I'm Better Than Before, But Inside My Heart Lies So Much Pain"
      • The Rohingya Community of Chicago, USA
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