Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 391 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Cash Generator shop in Kings Heath, Birmingham, United Kingdom. Cash Generator is a British based national pawn broker. The company describes itself as The Buy, Sell & Loan Store. Its core business is the buying and selling of second hand goods, mainly electrical and entertainment products.
    20170620_cash generator_001.jpg
  • A detail of an out of order Cash dispenser ATM in West Norwood, south London, on 14th November 2019, in London, England.
    cash_dispenser-01-14-12-2019.jpg
  • A lady walks away with an open wallet after taking cash from her local London branch of the Abbey National Building Society in 1989. With her finger almost touching the keypad, the lady and her companion are withdrawing cash from this hole in the wall after investing their funds in this branch of Britain's building society. Abbey National plc was a UK-based bank and former building society, which latterly traded under the Abbey brand name. It became a wholly owned subsidiary of the Spanish Santander Group in 2004, and was combined with the savings business of the former Bradford & Bingley in January 2010 to form Santander UK plc. Before the takeover, it was a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.
    cash_dispenser01-23-04-1989_1.jpg
  • Sign for the buy and sell brand Cash Generator in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands cash generator_002.jpg
  • Sign for the buy and sell brand Cash Generator in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands cash generator_001.jpg
  • Street view of a high-street cash converters shop in Lewisham, South London, United Kingdom.  A few people are waiting outside the shop and one man is looking at the jewelry section of the window display.  This is a pawn shop which also cashes cheques.
    UK-Poverty-Cash-converters-0190_1.jpg
  • A Securicor guard delivers a cash box to a City of London bank. Walking quickly to avoid delays in the street, the employee of this security company carries the secure box wearing protective helmet in case of an armed robbery - his most vulnerable body area being the head and neck. The box is padlocked and contains explosive dyes and loud alarms if forcefull opened. Securicor was originally founded by Edward Shortt, a former Liberal Cabinet Minister, in 1935 as Nightwatch Services: its guards rode bicycles and wore old police uniforms. However in 1939 it was taken over by Lord Willingdon and Henry Tiarks who developed it into a leading security business. It changed its name to Security Corps in 1951 then shortened to Securicor in 1953.
    securicor_cash-12-06-1993_1_1.jpg
  • A lady walks away with an open wallet after taking cash from her local London branch of the Abbey National Building Society. While holding a red umbrella that hides her face, the woman walks away from the cash dispenser and we can see her purse or wallet, open for others to view. The red from her brolley and that of the dispenser’s facia are matching hues so the dominant colour makes the picture’s theme. Cash dispensers in the UK are also called ‘holes in the wall’ and dispense bank notes to high street consumers on demand. The downside is often compromised security when people are unaware of those watching alongside to see PIN numbers and how much money is being taken out.
    abbey_dispenser01-23-04-1989_1.jpg
  • Rubber plantation, Ban Nam Dang village, Luang Namtha province, Lao PDR. In the far north of Lao PDR, along the border with China, 'The Corridor of Opportunity' refers specifically to an area where the evolving cash economy influenced by China is gradually replacing subsistence agriculture with vast swathes of the forest being replaced by cash crops such as rubber, banana and sugar cane.
    40-05_1_1.jpg
  • Growing chillies for export to China in the Tai Lue ethnic minority village of Ban Nawai, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0019635cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman harvests tea leaves, Ban Nam Thuan, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Rural communities are being impelled to move from swidden to sedentary agriculture and many subsistence farmers are turning to the cultivation of cash crops such as tea.
    A0016910cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman harvests tea leaves, Ban Nam Thuan, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Rural communities are being impelled to move from swidden to sedentary agriculture and many subsistence farmers are turning to the cultivation of cash crops such as tea.
    A0016894cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman harvests tea leaves, Ban Nam Thuan, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Rural communities are being impelled to move from swidden to sedentary agriculture and many subsistence farmers are turning to the cultivation of cash crops such as tea.
    A0016872cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman harvests tea leaves, Ban Nam Thuan, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Rural communities are being impelled to move from swidden to sedentary agriculture and many subsistence farmers are turning to the cultivation of cash crops such as tea.
    A0016869cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Chinese workers in a truck collecting pumpkins from the Khmu ethnic minority farmers in Ban Nam Khor, Oudomxay, Lao PDR. The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0016793cc_1.jpg
  • Damaged cash machine on the high street during the second national coronavirus lockdown on 28th November 2020 in Edmonton, London, United Kingdom.
    _E6A6723.jpg
  • Two men using a Barclays cash machine on a street in London, United Kingdom. These machines are called automated teller machine (ATM) or automated banking machine (ABM).  People are able to access their bank account to withdraw cash, debit card cash advances, check account balances and purchase pre-paid mobile phone credit. Barclays is a British multinational banking and financial services company.
    UK-Personal-Finance-ATM-Machine-2.jpg
  • With her young child asleep on her back, a Tai Lue ethnic minority woman plants out chilli seedlings for export to China, Ban Nawai, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0019637cc_1.jpg
  • Growing chillies for export to China in the Tai Lue ethnic minority village of Ban Nawai, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0019628cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman harvests tea leaves, Ban Nam Thuan, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Rural communities are being impelled to move from swidden to sedentary agriculture and many subsistence farmers are turning to the cultivation of cash crops such as tea.
    A0016906cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman harvests tea leaves, Ban Nam Thuan, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Rural communities are being impelled to move from swidden to sedentary agriculture and many subsistence farmers are turning to the cultivation of cash crops such as tea.
    A0016890cc_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a young Khmu ethnic minority girl working on her family farm in Ban Nam Khor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0016777cc_1.jpg
  • A young Khmu ethnic minority girl works on her family farm picking pumpkins in Ban Nam Khor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0016772cc_1.jpg
  • A British man withdrawing money from a Barclays cash machine on a street in London, United Kingdom. These machines are called automated teller machine (ATM) or automated banking machine (ABM).  People are able to access their bank account to withdraw cash, debit card cash advances, check account balances and purchase pre-paid mobile phone credit. Barclays i
    UK-Personal-Finance-ATM-Machine-1.jpg
  • Banana plantation, Luang Namtha province, Lao PDR. In the far north of Lao PDR, along the border with China, ‘The Corridor of Opportunity’ refers specifically to an area where the evolving cash economy influenced by China is gradually replacing subsistence agriculture.  Vast swathes of the forest are being replaced by cash crops such as rubber, banana and sugar cane.
    35-04_1_1.jpg
  • A cash dispenser in a U-Bahn station of Seestrasse in Wedding, a north-western district of Berlin. The German word Geldautomat (automatic money) is written above the dispenser that has bright red neon as part of its design. Euros can be obtained here using local cash cards as well as foreign credit by visitors.
    berlin_cash01-05-04-2013_1.jpg
  • Man supporting the Remain campaign and wearing the European flag draws cash from a London bank cash dispenser before the Together for the final say march for a People¹s Vote on 19th October 2019 in London, United Kingdom. On this day parliament will be sitting on a Saturday for the first time since the 1980s, as time runs out before the PM is supposed to ask the EU for a three month extension by law under the Benn Act. With less than two weeks until the UK is supposed to be leaving the European Union, the final result still hangs in the balance and protesters gathered in their hundreds of thousands to make political leaders take notice and to give the British public a vote on the final Brexit deal, with the aim to revoke Article 50.
    _E6A1432.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan carries a bowl of Arabica coffee cherries harvested for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020493cc_1.jpg
  • With her baby on her back, a Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020482cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020476cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020467cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan carries a sack of Arabica coffee cherries harvested for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020463cc.jpg
  • With her baby on her back, a Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020375cc_1.jpg
  • An elderly homeless man walks slowly past a Barclays Bank cash dispenser at which business people are either queueing or typing in their PIN numbers from cash accounts, or simply passing-by. One middle-aged gent stands eyeing the poor man suspiciously while other men of wealth, prospects and prosperity are tall and stand erect in smart suits and polished shoes, the homeless man is hunched and dishevelled, carrying a supermarket bag - perhaps containing all of his worldly goods. It is a tragic scene of extremes between the haves and the have-nots; the rich and poor; between people with hope and those in despair. This is the City of London, near Fenchurch Street Station where the UK's insurance companies are based and it is impossible to know if any of these men in smart clothes are the same age as the poor man.
    city_london14-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • A 24hr ATM cash dispenser operated by the RBS banking group and the Tesco supermarket is taped up and out of order in Camberwell, on 5th July 2017, in London, England.
    broken_atm-01-05-07-2017.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan gets some cash from the ATM cash point machine in her local supermarket in her neighbourhood of Barnsbury, near to Kings Cross, North London. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changes to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    18062011mother on benefitsAG.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan gets some cash from the ATM cash point machine in her local supermarket in her neighbourhood of Barnsbury, near to Kings Cross, North London. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changes to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    18062011mother on benefitsAI.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 9th August 2012. London 2012 Olympic Games Park in Stratford. People queue for the ATM cash machine. In the Olympic park you can only use a VISA credit or debit card, or cash. No other cards are accepted.
    20120809olympic visa atm_A.jpg
  • A Phunoi ethnic minority subsistence farmer clears her land by slashing and burning to grow hill rice and coffee as a cash crop in Ban Sinesai; Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  Swidden cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The practise is gradually being taken over by the planting of permanent cash crops such as coffee.
    A0016635cc_1.jpg
  • A Phunoi ethnic minority subsistence farmer accompanied by her young son clears her land by slashing and burning to grow hill rice and coffee as a cash crop in Ban Sinesai; Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  Swidden cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The practise is gradually being taken over by the planting of permanent cash crops such as coffee.
    A0016610cc_1.jpg
  • A Barclays bank cash machine displaying the message “Sorry, we are not able to give you cash right now” on a street in London, England, United Kingdom.  Barclays is a British multinational banking and financial services company.  As of December 2011, Barclays had total assets of US$ 2.42 trillion, the seventh-largest of any bank worldwide.
    UK-Personal-Finance-ATM-Machine-3869.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan gets some cash from the ATM cash point machine in her local supermarket in her neighbourhood of Barnsbury, near to Kings Cross, North London. Louise is on various benefits to help support her family income, and housing, although recent government changes to benefits may affect her family drastically, possibly meaning they may have to move out of London. Louise Ryan was born on the Wirral peninsula in 1970.  She moved to London with her family in 1980.  Having lived in both Manchester and Ireland, she now lives permanently in North London with her husband and two children. Through the years Louise has battled to recover from a serious motorcycle accident in 1992 and has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar Affective Disorder. (Photo by Mike Kemp/For The Washington Post)
    18062011mother on benefitsAH.jpg
  • Clearing of the land for planting cash crops, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  Swidden cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. In this area the practise is gradually being taken over by the planting of permanent cash crops such as coffee and tea.
    A0016503cc_1.jpg
  • Two people using Barclays cash ATM machines.
    20100804cash machinesA.jpg
  • A Tai Lue ethnic minority woman takes a rest from preparing an irrigation system from the Nam Boun river for watering her pumpkin plants,  the produce of which will be exported to China, Ban Kong, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  The scarcity of agricultural land in Southern Yunnan province is promoting Chinese farmers and small scale entrepreneurs to cross the international border between China and Lao PDR in order to invest in cash crops. The villagers are supplied with seeds, plastic and fertilisers to grow various crops which are then exported back to China on a vast scale.
    A0029103cc_1.jpg
  • Details of an antique cash register at Manze's Eel, Pie and Mash shop in Walthamstow, East London, UK.Although the shop still trades under the original Manze name, it is now independently owned and no longer part of the Manze family.Eel, pie and mash shops are a traditional but dying business. Changing tastes and the scarcity of the eel has meant that the number of shops selling this traditional working class food has declined to just a handful mostly in east London. The shops were originally owned by one or two families with the earliest recorded, Manze's on Tower Bridge Road being the oldest surviving dating from 1908. Generally eels are sold cold and jellied and the meat pie and mash potato covered in a green sauce called liquor.
    SFE_110711_091_1.jpg
  • Details of an antique cash register at Manze's Eel, Pie and Mash shop in Walthamstow, East London, UK.Although the shop still trades under the original Manze name, it is now independently owned and no longer part of the Manze family.Eel, pie and mash shops are a traditional but dying business. Changing tastes and the scarcity of the eel has meant that the number of shops selling this traditional working class food has declined to just a handful mostly in east London. The shops were originally owned by one or two families with the earliest recorded, Manze's on Tower Bridge Road being the oldest surviving dating from 1908. Generally eels are sold cold and jellied and the meat pie and mash potato covered in a green sauce called liquor.
    SFE_110711_087_1.jpg
  • Details of an antique cash register at Manze's Eel, Pie and Mash shop in Walthamstow, East London, UK.Although the shop still trades under the original Manze name, it is now independently owned and no longer part of the Manze family.Eel, pie and mash shops are a traditional but dying business. Changing tastes and the scarcity of the eel has meant that the number of shops selling this traditional working class food has declined to just a handful mostly in east London. The shops were originally owned by one or two families with the earliest recorded, Manze's on Tower Bridge Road being the oldest surviving dating from 1908. Generally eels are sold cold and jellied and the meat pie and mash potato covered in a green sauce called liquor.
    SFE_110711_043_1.jpg
  • People shop at a Cash and Carry shop along Rye Lane in Peckham on the 11th April 2018 in South London, United Kingdom.
    SOUTH-0735.jpg
  • As a staff member counts coins, 1990s women shoppers gather around the till to pay cash in a Budapest shop, on 13th June 1990, in Budapest, Hungary.
    budapest_till-13-06-1990.jpg
  • A British woman walks down the high street in Middlesborough town centre, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom.  She passes a Goldfactors and Cash Generator pawnbroker shops which are closed with their shutters down.
    UK-HigSt-CashConverter-1162_1.jpg
  • Organic carrots for sale by members of the Women's Rural Improvement Group at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022469cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • A woman wearing red searches for coins from her bag, against a background of primary colours, on 21st March 2017, outside the National Gallery, in London, England. In an era of online banking and chip and PINs, cash in ones bag is still needed for the trivial when out and about.
    red_blue-01-21-03-2017.jpg
  • Euro Money Bureau de Change kiosk and cash point ATM machines. London.
    20110116euro moneyA.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_E.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_D.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_F.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_C.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_P.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_A.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_B.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_U.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_T.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_R.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_M.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_O.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_L.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_N.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_K.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_J.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_I.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_H.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_B.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_G.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_F.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_D.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_C.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_A.jpg
  • Royal Bank of Scotland cash point ATM machines outside a branch in the City of London. RBS has become a symbol of the recession, credit crunch, financial failure during the economic downturn. Now 80% publicly owned the bank has again been in the news in 2012 following the appointment, then rejection of a 1m pound bonus by it's current chief executive, and the withdrawl of the nighthood of former chief executive.
    20120202rbs atm machines_D.jpg
  • Royal Bank of Scotland cash point ATM machines outside a branch in the City of London. RBS has become a symbol of the recession, credit crunch, financial failure during the economic downturn. Now 80% publicly owned the bank has again been in the news in 2012 following the appointment, then rejection of a 1m pound bonus by it's current chief executive, and the withdrawl of the nighthood of former chief executive.
    20120202rbs atm machines_C.jpg
  • Royal Bank of Scotland cash point ATM machines outside a branch in the City of London. RBS has become a symbol of the recession, credit crunch, financial failure during the economic downturn. Now 80% publicly owned the bank has again been in the news in 2012 following the appointment, then rejection of a 1m pound bonus by it's current chief executive, and the withdrawl of the nighthood of former chief executive.
    20120202rbs atm machines_B.jpg
  • Royal Bank of Scotland cash point ATM machines outside a branch in the City of London. RBS has become a symbol of the recession, credit crunch, financial failure during the economic downturn. Now 80% publicly owned the bank has again been in the news in 2012 following the appointment, then rejection of a 1m pound bonus by it's current chief executive, and the withdrawl of the nighthood of former chief executive.
    20120202rbs atm machines_A.jpg
  • Exterior of a former RBS Royal Bank of Scotland bank in the heart of the City of London on Threadneedle Street where two cash machines or ATMs have been removed along with the company logo leaving their traces on the wall on 12th August 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Royal Bank of Scotland was established in Edinburgh in 1727 and today employs almost 12,000 people and serves 1.8m personal customers and more than 110,000 business customers.
    20200812_former rbs_002.jpg
  • Exterior of a former RBS Royal Bank of Scotland bank in the heart of the City of London on Threadneedle Street where two cash machines or ATMs have been removed along with the company logo leaving their traces on the wall on 12th August 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Royal Bank of Scotland was established in Edinburgh in 1727 and today employs almost 12,000 people and serves 1.8m personal customers and more than 110,000 business customers.
    20200812_former rbs_003.jpg
  • Exterior of a former RBS Royal Bank of Scotland bank in the heart of the City of London on Threadneedle Street where two cash machines or ATMs have been removed along with the company logo leaving their traces on the wall on 12th August 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Royal Bank of Scotland was established in Edinburgh in 1727 and today employs almost 12,000 people and serves 1.8m personal customers and more than 110,000 business customers.
    20200812_former rbs_001.jpg
  • Organic radishes for sale by members of the Women's Rural Improvement Group at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022476cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Organic carrot for sale by members of the Women's Rural Improvement Group in Sitio Matinao at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022468cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Organic pepper for sale by members of the Women's Rural Improvement Group from Sitio Matinao at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022467cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Organic peppers for sale by members of the Women's Rural Improvement Group from Sitio Matinao at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022466cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • A woman from the local Women's farmer group in Sitio Matinao holding a bunch of bananas she is selling at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The  In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022353cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • A woman from the local Women's farmer group in Sitio Matinao holding a home-grown pumpkin she is selling at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The  In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022356cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • A woman holding a fruit at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines.  In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022348cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • A woman from the local Women's farmer group in Sitio Matinao holding a fruit she is selling at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022344cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • A woman from the local women's farmer group in Sitio Matinao holding red peppers she is selling at Alamada market, Cotabato Province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines.  In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022327cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • 72 year old Lilia Malinao's small vegetable shop outside her home in Sitio Matinao, Alamada, Cotabato province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. Lilia is also President of ‘Women’s Rural Improvement Club’ and has been involved in Oxfam’s BINDS project for 1 year and 8 months. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022262cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • 72 year old Lilia Malinao with her home grown vegetables, Sitio Matinao, Alamada, Cotabato province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines.  Lilia is also President of ‘Women’s Rural Improvement Club’ and has been involved in Oxfam’s BINDS project for 1 year and 8 months. 
In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0022240cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Josephine Alad-Ad (47), a member of 'Women's Rural Improvement Club' holding aubergines harvested from her farm in Sitio Matinao, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0021958cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Josephine Alad-Ad (47), a member of 'Women's Rural Improvement Group' harvests onions from her farm in Sitio Matinao, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0021899cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Josephine Alad-Ad (47), a member of 'Women's Rural Improvement Group' harvests onions from her farm in Sitio Matinao, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. In the Philippines climate change is contributing to an increase in the frequency and intensity of typhoons as well as a general rise in temperatures and rain leading to an increase in droughts, flash floods and landslides. This is having a huge impact on smallholder farmers who depend on one cash crop leaving them vulnerable to any changes in weather patterns. If their crops fail they are left with no other source of income for that year. In central Mindanao Oxfam is working with local partners and governments to increase awareness of climate change in poor communities and reduce the risks it creates to vulnerable farmers by supporting them in crop diversification.
    A0021896cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • The heads of opium poppies oozing sap in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    DSCF4747cc_1.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

In Pictures

  • About
  • Contact
  • Join In Pictures
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area