photojournalism

From the Streets of Haiti, a Real-Life Tarot Deck

Frustrated by relentless bad-news images from Haiti, a Belgian photographer teamed up with Haitian artists to recreate the entire tarot deck using real people and locations.

From the Streets of Haiti, a Real-Life Tarot Deck
A young refugee at the Atmeh refugee camp in Syria.

This picture will break your heart

This picture will break your heart
Wounded Palestinian Rawya abu Jom’a.

Heidi Levine's war photos from Gaza keep a colleague's memory alive

Heidi Levine's war photos from Gaza keep a colleague's memory alive
Youngsters surf the Internet near the ruined Darul Aman Palace, which was built in the 1930s. Only 5.5 percent of Afghan youths have access to the Internet, but technology played a role in connecting youth during last year's presidential elections.

See the surprising 'new' Afghanistan in these 18 photos

See the surprising 'new' Afghanistan in these 18 photos
Michel du Cille's haunting photographs from the Ebola front included this one of Esther Tokpah, 11, orphaned in Monrovia, Liberia

Remembering how photojournalist Michel du Cille framed the world

Remembering how photojournalist Michel du Cille framed the world
9-year-old Ahmad in Beirut 2014

Giving Syrian children their identities back, one portrait at a time

Photographer Rania Matar went back to her hometown of Beirut to work on a project about teenagers. Then, on every corner, she stumbled into young Syrian refugees. They became subjects of her new series called "Invisible Children."

Giving Syrian children their identities back, one portrait at a time
Coffins of US military personnel are prepared to be offloaded at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware in this undated photo. From 1991 to 2009, the government did not permit photographing the return of servicemembers killed in action.

Graphic images of war are hard to stomach — but some say they're necessary

When news outlets decide to publish graphic photos of war and violence, they often face censorship, opposition or anger for doing so. In the wake of the release of ISIS beheading videos, one journalist argues that there is value in bearing witness to war, even its ugliest parts.

Graphic images of war are hard to stomach — but some say they're necessary

The Art of Photojournalism

The Art of Photojournalism

Photographer Max Aguilera-Hellweg Goes Inside the Human Body

Photographer Max Aguilera-Hellweg Goes Inside the Human Body