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  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom, on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. The protestors are wearing costumes depicting Donald Trump, Theresa May and Liam Fox.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. Protesters hold signs stating people’s constituencies to demonstrate the geographical diversity of the protest.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom, on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. The protestors are wearing costumes depicting Donald Trump, Theresa May and Liam Fox.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. Protesters hold signs stating people’s constituencies to demonstrate the geographical diversity of the protest.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. Protesters hold signs stating people’s constituencies to demonstrate the geographical diversity of the protest.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. Protesters hold signs stating people’s constituencies to demonstrate the geographical diversity of the protest.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • Protesters from War on Want stage a demonstration outside the governments Department for International Trade building in London, England, United Kingdom on 6th February 2018, calling on Members of Parliament MPs to demand the parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals. Protesters hold signs stating people’s constituencies to demonstrate the geographical diversity of the protest.
    20180206_Trade_Deals_Protest_VF_01.j...jpg
  • People relaxing in the cafe snug area at Rough Trade East record shop in Shoreditch, East London, UK.
    20150224_rough trade east_A.jpg
  • People relaxing in the cafe snug area at Rough Trade East record shop in Shoreditch, East London, UK.
    20150224_rough trade east_B.jpg
  • A jet aircraft flies past the newly-completed One World Trade Center (WTC) on what was Ground Zero on the September 11th 2001 attacks on New York City, USA. As an ironic coincidence, we see the airliner flying high over Manhattan, passing the tall skyscraper that is being finished. The 104-story supertall structure, which shares a name with the northern Twin Tower in the original World Trade Center that was destroyed in the September 11 attacks, stands on the northwest corner of the 16-acre (6.5 ha) World Trade Center site, on the site of the original 6 World Trade Center. It was architect Daniel Libeskind who won the 2002 competition to develop a master plan for the World Trade Center's redevelopment.
    wtc_jet01-24-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Ten days ahead of the US Presidential elections, a Donald Trump lookalike holds a symbolic syringe containing the hormones that protesters say will be injected into livestock and sold to UK consumers if the UK negotiates a trade deal with the US, on 24th October 2020, in Westminster, London, England. Organisers, Global Justice Now say, "The trade deal could lead to the NHS being opened up permanently to American healthcare companies; chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef; forced deregulation of the UK’s environmental laws, workers’ rights and rights to data privacy; and new rules that make it impossible to take effective action on the climate crisis."
    Trump_hormones_protest08-24-10-2020.jpg
  • Ten days ahead of the US Presidential elections, a Donald Trump lookalike holds a symbolic syringe containing the hormones that protesters say will be injected into livestock and sold to UK consumers if the UK negotiates a trade deal with the US, on 24th October 2020, in Westminster, London, England. Organisers, Global Justice Now say, "The trade deal could lead to the NHS being opened up permanently to American healthcare companies; chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef; forced deregulation of the UK’s environmental laws, workers’ rights and rights to data privacy; and new rules that make it impossible to take effective action on the climate crisis."
    Trump_hormones_protest06-24-10-2020.jpg
  • Ten days ahead of the US Presidential elections, a Donald Trump lookalike holds a symbolic syringe containing the hormones that protesters say will be injected into livestock and sold to UK consumers if the UK negotiates a trade deal with the US, on 24th October 2020, in Westminster, London, England. Organisers, Global Justice Now say, "The trade deal could lead to the NHS being opened up permanently to American healthcare companies; chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef; forced deregulation of the UK’s environmental laws, workers’ rights and rights to data privacy; and new rules that make it impossible to take effective action on the climate crisis."
    Trump_hormones_protest04-24-10-2020.jpg
  • Ten days ahead of the US Presidential elections, a Donald Trump lookalike holds a symbolic syringe containing the hormones that protesters say will be injected into livestock and sold to UK consumers if the UK negotiates a trade deal with the US, on 24th October 2020, in Westminster, London, England. Organisers, Global Justice Now say, "The trade deal could lead to the NHS being opened up permanently to American healthcare companies; chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef; forced deregulation of the UK’s environmental laws, workers’ rights and rights to data privacy; and new rules that make it impossible to take effective action on the climate crisis."
    Trump_hormones_protest01-24-10-2020.jpg
  • Ten days ahead of the US Presidential elections, a Donald Trump lookalike holds a symbolic syringe containing the hormones that protesters say will be injected into livestock and sold to UK consumers if the UK negotiates a trade deal with the US, on 24th October 2020, in Westminster, London, England. Organisers, Global Justice Now say, "The trade deal could lead to the NHS being opened up permanently to American healthcare companies; chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef; forced deregulation of the UK’s environmental laws, workers’ rights and rights to data privacy; and new rules that make it impossible to take effective action on the climate crisis."
    Trump_hormones_protest05-24-10-2020.jpg
  • Delegates discuss business outside the UKTI Defence & Security exhibition chalet at the Farnborough Air Show. In deep discussion are two businessmen beneath the UK flag and the large letters UK. UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) is a UK Government department working with businesses based in the United Kingdom to ensure their success in international markets, and encourage the best overseas companies to look to the UK as their global partner of choice. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    uk_stand02-09-07-2012_1_1.jpg
  • Businessmen inspect the 12ft Fire Shadow missile on manufacturer MBDA's trade stand at the Farnborough airshow. An employee shows visiting guests to this exhibit the merits of its use and design. The so-called lurker bomb is designed to loiter above a battlefield for up to 6 hours before attacking stationary or mobile targets and also able to shadow British troops for up to ten hours or 100 miles, ready to take out enemy targets with surgical precision at a minute’s notice. . The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    mbda_missile02-11-07-2012.jpg
  • Delegates outside Italian aerospace and defence Finmeccanica's trade stand at the Farnborough Air Show, UK. Finmeccanica S.p.A. is an Italian conglomerate. Finmeccanica is the second largest industrial group and the largest of the hi-tech industrial groups based in Italy. It operates in seven sectors: Aeronautics, Helicopters, Space, Defence and Security Electronics, Defence Systems, Energy and Transportation. The company has offices in over 100 countries. It is partially owned by the Italian government, which holds about 30% of Finmeccanica's shares. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July, known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    finmeccanica_stand05-09-07-2012_1.jpg
  • A soldier from the British Royal Artillery guards a 12ft Fire Shadow missile on manufacturer MBDA's trade stand at the Farnborough airshow, shows visiiting guests to this exhibit the merits of its use and design. The so-called lurker bomb is designed to loiter above a battlefield for up to 6 hours before attacking stationary or mobile targets and also able to shadow British troops for up to ten hours or 100 miles, ready to take out enemy targets with surgical precision at a minute’s notice. . The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    mbda_missile06-11-07-2012.jpg
  • A soldier from the British Royal Artillery guards a 12ft Fire Shadow missile on manufacturer MBDA's trade stand at the Farnborough airshow, ready to show visiting guests to this exhibit the merits of its use and design. The so-called lurker bomb is designed to loiter above a battlefield for up to 6 hours before attacking stationary or mobile targets and also able to shadow British troops for up to ten hours or 100 miles, ready to take out enemy targets with surgical precision at a minute’s notice. . The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    mbda_fireshadow04-09-07-2012.jpg
  • Trade Justice movement delegates present the trade justice key to a  representastive of the German Ambassador outside the German embassy.
    07-tjm_7407.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5698.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5683.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5644.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5514.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A4668.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5062.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5182.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5311.jpg
  • A woman sits in her stall selling plastic flowers at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu044.jpg
  • A muslim trader talk with stall owners selling holiday decorations at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu041.jpg
  • A muslim trader talk with stall owners selling holiday decorations at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu040.jpg
  • A woman pulls a cart carrying her son as well as sacks of goods through the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu039.jpg
  • A woman sleeps in a hallway at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu037.jpg
  • A woman and her daughter wait in their stall selling Christmas decorations at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu032.jpg
  • A woman sits in her stall selling plastic Christmas trees at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu026.jpg
  • A man sits in his stall selling Santa Claus costumes and hats at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu024.jpg
  • A man sits in his stall selling Santa Claus costumes and hats at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu020.jpg
  • A man picks out Santa Claus wall decorations at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu018.jpg
  • A man sits in his stall selling Christmas trees ornaments at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu016.jpg
  • A man sits in his stall selling Christmas trees ornaments at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.  As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu015.jpg
  • A man sits in his stall selling Christmas trees ornaments at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu013.jpg
  • A woman holding her son sits in her stall selling plastic Christmas trees at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu011.jpg
  • A woman sits in her stall selling plastic cacti at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu008.jpg
  • A woman sits in a stall selling Santa Claus figures at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu005.jpg
  • A woman sits in a stall selling Santa Claus figures at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu003.jpg
  • A woman sits in a stall selling Santa Claus figures at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.  As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu002.jpg
  • Divine organic fair trade chocolate bars, white, dark and milk.
    04-03-6638.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A5358.jpg
  • Stop Trump, Stop the Trade Deal protest on 24th October 2020 in Parliament Square, London, United Kingdom. The protest and press call featured a pantomime cow being chased by a Donald Trump look-alike as well as a business man with a giant hormone syringe. Activists dressed up as chckens demanded  not to be chlorinated. The nationwide day of action was organised by Global Justice Now, War on Want, Keep Our NHS Public, Traidcraft, We Own It, Open Rights Group, SumOfUs, Stop Trump and Another Europe is Possible.
    3E9A4836.jpg
  • A young man wearing a trick Santa Claus costume wait for customers outside of his stall at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu045.jpg
  • A woman sits in her stall selling plastic Christmas trees at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu029.jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-24-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-20-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-18-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-15-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-14-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-09-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-11-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-01-09-06-2...jpg
  • Mannequins in a small fashion shop window in Whitechapel in East London on 24th February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The area of the East End around Spitalfields and Whitechapel has been home to clothing businesses, often referred to as ‘The Rag Trade for over 250 years. Started primarily by the Huguenots, religious refugees from Eighteenth century, the Rag Trade has dominated the area ever since, and in Whitechapel is now primarily Bangladeshi in ownership.
    20200224_whitechapel fashion shop_00...jpg
  • Anonymous buyers discuss deals behind the model of a Boeing 747 jet airliner at the Farnborough Air Show, England. The Farnborough International Airshow is a week-long event that combines a major trade exhibition for the aerospace and defence industries with a public airshow. According to the organisers, the 2012 Farnborough show attracted 109,000 trade visitors over the first five days, and 100,000 public visitors on the Saturday and Sunday. Orders and commitments for 758 aircraft were announced, worth US$72 billion.
    farnborough_air_show39-14-07-2014_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a local butcher in the Essex seaside town of Frinton-on-Sea. Proud of his produce of fresh joints and carcasses of fresh meat, his business shows a successful and protitable financial concern in this Essex seaside town, largely inhabited by the older generation. We see in the background, hanging pork on hooks and beef joints in the display cabinet with a model of a butcher with his chopping block. A butcher is an ancient trade, whose duties may date back to the domestication of livestock, butchers formed guilds in England as far back as 1272. Today, many jurisdictions offer trade certifications for butchers. Some areas expect a three-year apprenticeship followed by the option of becoming a master butcher.
    butcher_portrait-12-06-1992_1.jpg
  • A dlegate inspects the interior of an open cargo/baggage hold in the belly of a Ukranian airlines Embraer 190 airliner at the Farnborough Air Show, UK. In July 2011, 349 Embraer 190 aircraft (all variants) are in airline service, with 170 orders. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    embraer_19002-09-07-2012_1.jpg
  • British Prime Minister David Cameron walks past one of the Airbus exhibition stands at the Farnborough Air Show, England. Helping to launch this expo held for the international aviation and aerospace industries, Cameron toured stands to help promote trade and investment for this 48th airshow (FIA) and hailed the phenomenal success of the UK aerospace industry and its critical importance to growth and jobs. Farnborough is attended by an international business audience including 83 trade and military delegations from over 43 countries. The Airbus A400M Atlas, is a multi-national four-engine turboprop military transport aircraft. It was designed by Airbus Military as a tactical airlifter with strategic capabilities. The aircraft's maiden flight, originally planned for 2008, took place on 11 December 2009 in Seville, Spain.
    cameron_airbus01-09-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Malaysian Airlines Airbus A380 performs in blue skies during Britain's Farnborough Air Show. The Airbus A380 is a double-deck, wide-body, four-engine jet airliner manufactured by the European corporation Airbus, a subsidiary of EADS. It is the world's largest passenger airliner and, due to its size, many airports have had to expand their facilities to properly accommodate it. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July, known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    a380_farnborough01-11-07-2012_1.jpg
  • The statue of Sir Thomas Guy stands outside the historical entrance of Guys hospital, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. Thomas Guy 1644 – 1724 was British bookseller, speculator and founder of Guys Hospital, London whose links to the global slave trade is now a controversial aspect of this businessman by anti-slavery activists and more recently, Black Lives Matter protesters. His wealth came through shares in the South Sea Company whose main business was in the selling of slaves from Africa to the Spanish colonies. In 1720 he successfully sold his stock of the company for approx £400 million at todays prices and amassed a large fortune, opening the Guys Hospital  in 1725 which today serves as one of  the capitals major NHS healthcare centres. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Guys and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-28-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-27-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-19-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-06-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-08-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-05-09-06-2...jpg
  • Silver mannequins in a small fashion shop window in Whitechapel in East London on 24th February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The area of the East End around Spitalfields and Whitechapel has been home to clothing businesses, often referred to as ‘The Rag Trade for over 250 years. Started primarily by the Huguenots, religious refugees from Eighteenth century, the Rag Trade has dominated the area ever since, and in Whitechapel is now primarily Bangladeshi in ownership.
    20200224_whitechapel fashion shop_00...jpg
  • Potential buyers discuss Trent engines with Rolls-Royce employee at the Farnborough Air Show. In one of the main halls where manufacturers and exhibitors showcase their products for the defence and aerospace industries, a RR employee discusses the technical merits of the Trent family turbofans whose orders help preserve jobs at the company factories. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    RR_stand01-09-07-2012.jpg
  • Delegates walk past a billboard of an A380 airliner outside one of the EADS company's chalets at the Farnborough Air Show. The Airbus A380 is a double-deck, wide-body, four-engine jet airliner manufactured by the European corporation Airbus, a subsidiary of EADS. It is the world's largest passenger airliner and, due to its size, many airports have had to expand their facilities to properly accommodate it. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July, known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    airbus_stand03-09-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Delegates walk past a billboard of an A380 airliner outside one of the EADS company's chalets at the Farnborough Air Show. The Airbus A380 is a double-deck, wide-body, four-engine jet airliner manufactured by the European corporation Airbus, a subsidiary of EADS. It is the world's largest passenger airliner and, due to its size, many airports have had to expand their facilities to properly accommodate it. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July, known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    a380_farnborough04-11-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Sign made to look like a shipping container and reading Made In China at the China Guangdong Pilot Free Trade Zone exhibition center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, on Tuesday, April 19, 2016. Once synonymous with Chinas manufacturing might, as the days of cheap land and labor recede, the provinces businesses are in a race to upgrade or move.
    QS2016Archive_235.jpg
  • Sign made to look like a shipping container and reading Made In China at the China Guangdong Pilot Free Trade Zone exhibition center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, on Tuesday, April 19, 2016. Once synonymous with Chinas manufacturing might, as the days of cheap land and labor recede, the provinces businesses are in a race to upgrade or move.
    QS2016Archive_240.jpg
  • Sign made to look like a shipping container and reading Made In China at the China Guangdong Pilot Free Trade Zone exhibition center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, on Tuesday, April 19, 2016. Once synonymous with Chinas manufacturing might, as the days of cheap land and labor recede, the provinces businesses are in a race to upgrade or move.
    QS2016Archive_238.jpg
  • Sign made to look like a shipping container and reading Made In China at the China Guangdong Pilot Free Trade Zone exhibition center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, on Tuesday, April 19, 2016. Once synonymous with Chinas manufacturing might, as the days of cheap land and labor recede, the provinces businesses are in a race to upgrade or move.
    QS2016Archive_234.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 034.jpg
  • Workers sleeping at Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 023.jpg
  • Workers sleeping at Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 018.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 010.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 008_alamy.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 006.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 003_alamy.jpg
  • A meeting of planners and businessmen at an agricultural trade fair in Paris in the early nineteen sixties. Huddled together around a set of plans, the trio discuss the merits and disadvantages of the ambitions they have for the exhibit being built behind. This is an annual expo of farming equipment such as tractors and this stand belongs to Ford, whose employees are over for this important exhibition in the industry calendar. The picture was recorded on Kodachrome (Kodak) film in about 1961.
    sixties_archive01-15-03-1961_1_1.jpg
  • Peering through the steamy window of a Chinese restaurant in London's Chinatown district, we see the shapes and forms of kitchen staff and customers in this lively scene. In the window are rows of Peking Duck with their skins cooked a crispy dark brown. Meanwhile, surrounded by cooking utensils and implements, the tools of their trade, two chefs busy themselves in the kitchen area, one's face shows him to be ethnic Chinese who is rubbing his hands in a cloth before continuing his chores. Two European girls are waiting expectantly for their dishes to arrive. Obscured by the steam and heat, a waiter in green bustles about this small eaterie.
    electricity122-17-01-2008 _1.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai039.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai037.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai033.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai014.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai012.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai010.jpg
  • Vistors attend the Bauma 2010, a trade show for heavy machinery, in Shanghai China, on Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  China's economic boom have provided a water shed to manufacturers of heavy machinary as demand fall elsewhere.
    QS101123Shanghai007.jpg
  • Monica Kigwa drying out her coffee beans on a tarpaulin supplied by Kulika. Monica is suffering from Malaria, she is a widow with 6 children, 4 of her own and two she has adopted. She produced 174 Kgs of coffee in 2006 after being re-trained by Kulika. Monica lives in the Kamuli district of Uganda. Coffee in the area is not organic but is Fair Trade. The Kulika project run Sustainable Organic Agricultural Training Programs.
    07-uganda_4454.jpg
  • Monica Kigwa plants a new coffee plant seedling. Monica is suffering from Malaria, she is a widow with 6 children, 4 of her own and two she has adopted.. She produced 174 Kgs of coffee in 2006 after being re-trained by Kulika. Monica lives in the Kamuli district of Uganda. Coffee in the area is not organic but is Fair Trade. The Kulika project run Sustainable Organic Agricultural Training Programs.
    07-uganda_4426.jpg
  • Monica Kigwa a coffee farmer holding a new seedling. Monica is suffering from Malaria, she is a widow with 4 children and 2 adopted kids. She produced 174 Kgs of coffee in 2006 after being re-trained by Kulika. Monica lives in the Kamuli district of Uganda. Coffee in the area is not organic but is Fair Trade. The Kulika project run Sustainable Organic Agricultural Training Programs.
    07-uganda_4423.jpg
  • A representative from the German embassy in London accepts the symbolic Trade Justice key.  Belgrave Square, London SW1
    07-tjm_7453.jpg
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