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  • A portrait of three brothers of the same family have their picture taken outside their parents' home in Westcliff, England. The eldest is a teenager of approximately 17 and  is holding his youngest brother who is still only 12 months-old. The third boy is biting his lip while looking to the viewer, more anxiously than the other two. He is possibly 14 but both the elder lads wear identically-designed jumpers that cut across the throat to allow their clean white shirts and ties to remain visible. Apart from the young child, the elders share the same dark hair colour but genetically, they share one chromosome that has given them heavy eyebrows, a family trait. This was taken on Kodachrome film stock in the spring of 1961 so the look and feel of the image is dated with wonderfully muted colours that this Kodak film offered to consumers in the early 60s.
    family_archive2515-03_1961_1.jpg
  • A Nepalese mother sits with her two sons in their family home in Kathmandu, Nepal.  Her older son had been found living on the streets by Voice of Children not-for-profit organisation.  His mother had sent him out to earn money for the family as she had no income.  The organisation have supported this family and enabled the mother to find work so that both her sons can live at home and attend a school education.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Family-Home-7515_1.jpg
  • A young lad of 10 poses for a portrait taken by his brother while holding the hand of his young nephew. Confusingly, the 10 year-old uncle and the 1 year-old child are closer in age than the two brothers. The older boy is on holiday in Malawi visiting expat family in the then capital, Blantyre, so named after the town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, where the explorer David Livingstone was born. Both boys stand in the dust of a back yard where a broken windmill remains upright in the intense brightness of mid-day. It is a scene of awkward and gangly boyhood versus the confidence and innocence of young childhood and their posture is exaggerated by differing heights. Kodachrome film has a wonderful magenta colour cast in mid-tones reminiscent of the classic days of early photography when shifts in color gave a faded look.
    family_archive2620-07_1970_1.jpg
  • A Nepalese mother sits with some of her family in their home in a slum in Kankeshori area of Kathmandu, Nepal.  Twelve family members live in this one-room shack made of corrugated iron.  The woman has eight children and two grandchildren, the youngest is 2-months old and is lying on a table sleeping.
    Nepal-Slum-Family-Home-6779_1.jpg
  • A Nepalese family in their home in Kathmandu, Nepal. The family is being supported by Voice for Children organisation which supports street children and those who are at risk of sexual abuse through educational and vocational training opportunities, health services and psychosocial counseling.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Family-home-7659_1.jpg
  • A local family walk uphill towards the houses of a nineteen-eighties, middle-class housing estate on 21st April 2019, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England.
    nailsea_family-15-21-04-2019.jpg
  • A local family discuss ideas and directions while walking uphill towards the houses of a nineteen-eighties, middle-class housing estate on 21st April 2019, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England.
    nailsea_family-13-21-04-2019.jpg
  • A local family discuss ideas and directions while walking uphill towards the houses of a nineteen-eighties, middle-class housing estate on 21st April 2019, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England.
    nailsea_family-12-21-04-2019.jpg
  • Family playing by the River Thames at Battersea Bridge in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20180225_family playing_001.jpg
  • A family of three sit on the edge of a saltwater pool at Clevedon, on 22nd April 2017, in North Somerset, England.
    seaside_family-02-22-04-2017.jpg
  • Family enjoy resting on a bench on the busy walkway in the sunshine. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140410_south bank family bench_A.jpg
  • While officers stand in the quadrangle, Britain's royal family appear on the balcony at Buckingham Palace. The VIPs above have all returned from the nearby parade ground at Horseguards where troops perform a marching ceremony on the Sovereign's birthday which is officially celebrated by the ceremony of Trooping the Colour on a Saturday in June. Traditionally they appear on the palace balcony and wave to royalist crowds. In this picture are members of royalty, now deceased including Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, Princess Margaret and Pricess Diana. In the distance are officers who have also returned from the parade ground.
    royal_family-20-06-1991_1.jpg
  • A family walk along the surf with their reflections in wet sand at the Welsh seaside town of Llandudno. Holding a very tired toddler, the mother walks alongside the father and a small girl who splashes in shallow water. Their figures are seen in the reflected wet sand at low tide.
    beach_family-18-07-1993_1.jpg
  • Members of the British Royal Family appear on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after the Queens annual Trooping the Colour ceremony, on 15th June 1991, in London, England. Present are the Queen and the Queen Mother; the Duke of Edinburgh; Princess Margaret; Prince Charles and Diana Princess of Wales and Prince Andrew.
    royal_family-15-06-1991.jpg
  • A family of two sisters and a father walk through spring woods, on 23rd April 2017, in Wrington, North Somerset, England.
    bluebells_family-01-23-04-2017.jpg
  • Family with a new baby on the busy Southbank walkway. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140410_south bank family baby_A.jpg
  • In late sunshine, a family of parents and two young children try to launch a stunt kite into the air in a south London park. The sun is low and catches the fabric of the kite's colours as mother holds its frame up in the air when the wind picks up. The park is a public space called Ruskin Park in London SE24, herne Hill, a local place for kids and parents in the inner-city borough of Lambeth.
    family_kite03-12-10-2012_1.jpg
  • In late sunshine, a family of parents and two young children try to launch a stunt kite into the air in a south London park. The sun is low and catches the fabric of the kite's colours as mother holds its frame up in the air when the wind picks up. The park is a public space called Ruskin Park in London SE24, herne Hill, a local place for kids and parents in the inner-city borough of Lambeth.
    family_kite01-12-10-2012_1.jpg
  • A young Nepalese boy holds one of his siblings as he talks to a female visitor in his home a slum in Kankeshori area of Kathmandu, Nepal. Twelve family members live in this one-room shack made of corrugated iron.  They are being visited by a representative from the Voice of Children organisation. The not-for-profit organisation supports street children and those who are at risk of sexual abuse through educational and vocational training opportunities, health services and psychosocial counseling.
    Nepal-Slum-Family-Home-6788_1.jpg
  • Two Nepalese brothers sit on their bed and watch television in their bedroom at home in Kathmandu, Nepal.  Their home is made from bricks and wood with a corrugated iron roof.  The older boy used live and beg on the streets, but has been reunited with his family through Voice of Children organisation.
    Nepal-Kathmandu-Family-Home-7552_1.jpg
  • Two queens and one princess, members of the British royal family are depicted on a postcard rack in central London.  On the left is Queen Elizabeth (known as the Queen Mother (born Bowes-Lyon) who died at the age of 101 in 2002. Her daughter is the present Queen Elizabeth the second and to her right is Princess Diana, the Princess of Wales who died tragically in Paris in 1997. The three are seen on sale outside a tourist shop in Whitehall in the borough of Westminster where revenue-earning foreign holidaymakers frequent to see major landmark sites such as Parliament and Buckingham Palace. While the Queen wears a formal crown, the Princess is with a tiara and all three are on sale for 30 pence (£0.3)
    royal_family-06-09-1997.jpg
  • Children on a family holiday use binoculars to search for dolphins from the Kent coast on the 30th of August 2016, Folkestone, Kent, United Kingdom. The boy aged 5 and the girl aged 8 are dressed for the clear blue sky of the summer.
    UK-family-holiday-tourism-binoculars...jpg
  • Children on a family holiday use binoculars to search for dolphins from the Kent coast on the 30th of August 2016, Folkestone, Kent, United Kingdom. The boy aged 5 and the girl aged 8 are dressed for the clear blue sky of the summer.
    UK-family-holiday-tourism-binoculars...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 9th August 2012. London 2012 Olympic Games Park in Stratford. A Sikh family at the park.
    20120809olympic sikh family_A_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso with family have lunch together amid posters of Mao  Zedong and  the Dalai Lama in home close to the shores of Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_024-2_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso, 22, shares a joke and an intimate moment with her mother Mu Ze Namu, they belong to the Mo Suo minority / tribe from Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room
    chilugu_048_1.jpg
  • Close up of family meal in home close to the shores of Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_026_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso a Mo Suo minority,  with friend go shopping for groceries in Yongning town’s market, in northwest Yunnan Province close to Sichuan and Tibetatn border.<br />
<br />
Mo Su people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Su traditions. minority,  with friend go shopping for groceries in Yongning town’s market, in northwest Yunnan Province close to Sichuan and Tibetatn border.<br />
<br />
Mo Su people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walkin
    chilugu_012-2_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso, 22,  at home with her parents, Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_039_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso working in  the family's courtyard with mother and father and a neighbour's child, close to  Lugu lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_028_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso with a friend, also from the Mo Suo minority visit a Buddhist temple in Yongning town, north west Yunnan Province, close to Tibetan and Sichuan border.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_049_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso  prepares lunch at home amidst hanging corns and posters and photos of the Dalai Lama, in village along the shores of Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_022_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso a Mo Suo minority,  with friend go shopping for groceries in Yongning town’s market, in northwest Yunnan Province close to Sichuan and Tibetatn border.<br />
<br />
Mo Su people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Su traditions.
    chilugu_010-2_1.jpg
  • Frank a Safe Passage supporter with Vanessa Redgrave CBE and other supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2938.jpg
  • At a Hindu wedding the bride groom arrives at the venue of the ceremong with his family and friends and is greeted by the bride's family and friends, Neemrana Fort Palace, Rajasthan, India.
    20071127_india_0132_1.jpg
  • Yvette Cooper MP speaking to supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-4057.jpg
  • Lord Alf Dubs joins supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-4112.jpg
  • Supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-3980.jpg
  • Supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-3956.jpg
  • Lord Alf Dubs joins supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020, Parliament Square, Westminster in London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2972.jpg
  • Award winning author Sir Michael Morpurgo joins supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-3934.jpg
  • Award winning author Sir Michael Morpurgo joins supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-3933.jpg
  • Lord Alf Dubs speaking to supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2888.jpg
  • Lord Alf Dubs joins supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-3017.jpg
  • Supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2865.jpg
  • Supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2786.jpg
  • Lord Alf Dubs and Award winning author Sir Michael Morpurgo join supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2769.jpg
  • Lord Alf Dubs, Vanessa Redgrave CBE and Diane Abbot MP join supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2835.jpg
  • Supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2746.jpg
  • Supporters of the Child Refugee charity Safe Passage calling on Peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment and uphold refugee family reunion on the 20th of January 2020 in Parliament Square, Westminster, London, United Kingdom. 95% of the children currently receiving legal support from the charity Safe Passage International to reunite with relatives in the UK would not be eligible for family reunion under current UK Immigration Rules.
    2020-SafePassage-2757.jpg
  • A Real Birmingham Family by Gillian Wearing in Birmingham, United Kingdom. A Real Birmingham Family is a public artwork and sculpture by Gillian Wearing, cast in bronze, and erected in Centenary Square, outside the Library of Birmingham, England, on 30 October 2014. It depicts two local sisters, each single mothers called Roma and Emma Jones, with their two children.
    20191005_gillian wearing sculpture b...jpg
  • A Real Birmingham Family by Gillian Wearing in Birmingham, United Kingdom. A Real Birmingham Family is a public artwork and sculpture by Gillian Wearing, cast in bronze, and erected in Centenary Square, outside the Library of Birmingham, England, on 30 October 2014. It depicts two local sisters, each single mothers called Roma and Emma Jones, with their two children.
    20191005_gillian wearing sculpture b...jpg
  • Tourist family take a selfie on Ponte Accademia with the Grand Canal in the background. All looking up into the lens of their phone, the family members consisting of the parents and their children stand on this major bridge crossing the canal where a Vaporetto ferry is about to pass underneath. Vendors sell selfie sticks everywhere on the streets and the selfie remains a firm favourite way of recording the family holiday.
    venice_98-22-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Baldassare and Felicia De Simons (centre) and family surrounded by lemons in their garden in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy. The family have owned this land for generations, the family would choose to stay if the volcano erupts again. "I was born here, I grew up here, I will die here, I've never been afraid here," says Baldassare. But Giuseppe Mastrolorenzo at the Vesuvius Volcano Observatory in Naples adds, "There would be no modern precedent for an evacuation of this magnitude .. This is why Vesuvius is the most dangerous volcano in the world." From the chapter entitled 'Under the Volcano' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    vesuvius343-29-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Georgia Ryan (11) hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, North London. Louise (her mother) 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAD.jpg
  • Baldassare and Felicia De Simons (centre) and family surrounded by lemons in their garden in the village of Somma Vesuviana, in the Red (evacuation) Zone on the western slope of Vesvius, Somma, Italy. The family have owned this land for generations, the family would choose to stay if the volcano erupts again. "I was born here, I grew up here, I will die here, I've never been afraid here," says Baldassare. But Giuseppe Mastrolorenzo at the Vesuvius Volcano Observatory in Naples adds, "There would be no modern precedent for an evacuation of this magnitude .. This is why Vesuvius is the most dangerous volcano in the world." From the chapter entitled 'Under the Volcano' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    vesuvius375-29-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Nobleman Nahar Singhji, also known as Rao Saheb, relaxes  with his wife Rani Saheb on a terrace of the Deogarh Mahal (Fort - Palace) a 340 year old architectural jewel. She being the chief decorator of the now heritage hotel, after the family had no way of maintaining it's upkeep. His family belonged to the Umroa’s of Udaipur. “Lords” of the State of Mewar, paying allegiance to the Maharana of Udaipur. Eight generations of his family have lived in the Deogarh fort after which in 1996 it was converted into a hotel, Udaipur, Rajasthan, India
    20071113_india_0333_1.jpg
  • Three generations of one family at the home of their granndmother. To Chinese family is extremely important and regular visits home are normal.
    2006_05_28_Chinese generationsA_1.jpg
  • A tray containing doob grass, sandlewood, rice, coin are the elements that a bride's family use to bless a Hindu marriage, Jaipur, India.
    20071127_india_0087_1.jpg
  • A local family enjoy their youngest child in Bairat, a village on the West Bank of Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt. The family are dependent on tourism with the husband and grandfather employed as a driver to a local travel family company. Holding up the infant so that it is standing on the palm of its mother's hands, safely supporting the baby with a hand under the arm.
    egypt35-01-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Having packed nearly all their possessions into a removal company's truck, a family have left this terraced house apart from a telephone that sits on the carpet in the middle of the carpet, on a ground floor home in Herne Hill, South London England UK. The family have taken the precaution of using a professional removal company, rather than trying to move themselves,  and we see a yellow storage van parked outside in the street ready to drive  the house's contents to the new property. This family home is now empty awaiting its new occupants who will soon arrive with their own items.
    RB_130-28-09-1999.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsL.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsK.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsJ.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan. Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsH.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11) and son Kiefer (8). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsB.jpg
  • Georgia Ryan (11) hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, North London. Louise (her mother) 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAH.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her son Kiefer (8). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAB.jpg
  • Florence Khalumbia (46) With daughter Alice (7 ) lives just 50 metres from the “California” dumpsite in a one-bedroom hut with her five children. None of the children go to school – she feels that it’s better that they stay home and help their family to earn a living. Alice, the youngest, is seven years old, and she spends her days sorting through rubbish with her 14-year-old brother Allan Karani. They’ve never had any formal education and neither can read or write. Florence does want her children to improve their situation, but so that they can look after her. The family manages to earn just over a dollar a day from sorting rubbish at the dumpsite but that is not enough to buy food for the family.
    Eldoret20_1.jpg
  • An older uncle with his two nephews sit on tropical grass in the family African garden in 1970. This amateur family souvenir portrait is a snapshot taken decades before the advent of the digital photograph, preserving the quality of a bygone era. The garden is in the African town of Blantyre in Malawi where this expatriate family lived. This decade is shown with the shorts sandals of seventies childhood.
    seventies_archive03-20-07-1970_1_1.jpg
  • A family collect sloe berries from bush in Kent countryside. Reaching up into the prickly twigs and with strong sun shining into the image, creating a refracted pattern on a man's face in the foreground, we see four members of the family picking the berries in the autumn. They are high on an escarpment, above the Kent countryside whose fields can be seen below. The mother laughs, the daughter reaches high and the boy wears a cheque-patterned hoodie - the favoured clothes of some teenagers. It is a happy family picture as they enjoy the great outdoors after a walk through nearby country.
    kent_walk02-10-10-2010 12-43-43.jpg
  • An exhausted father lays on the family sofa, snuggled up with his infant child who also slumbers on his chest. He has been reading a yellow-covered copy of the Don de Lillo novel, Libra. In the background, the wife and mother can be seen having some sort of personal crisis while the man looks very chilled out and probably  pleased to have the chance to read, snooze and have his sleeping child to comfort. It is a scene of role-reversal as the male of the family is the one left holding the baby, a scene of a modern family as opposed to the traditional Victorian or Edwardian gender.
    fatherhood-20-03-2001_1.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, North London. Louise, looking distressed here, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsV.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, North London. Louise, looking distressed here, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsS.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan's hand and turquoise jewellery. Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsR.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsP.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsN.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsF.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11) here jumping up and down in excitement. Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsD.jpg
  • Mother Louise Irwin-Ryan with her daughter Georgia (11). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAS.jpg
  • Brother and sister Georgia Ryan  (11) and Kiefer (8). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, playing on the climbing frames, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAL.jpg
  • Brother and sister Georgia Ryan  (11) and Kiefer (8). Hanging around in the Harvist Estate, playing on the climbing frames, Arsenal, 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAK.jpg
  • Kiefer Ryan (8) hanging around in the Harvist Estate, Arsenal, North London. Louise (his mother) 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)
    09062011family on benefitsAJ.jpg
  • Locals gathered on Dover seafront for a candlelit vigil to mark the tragic death of the Kurdish-Iranian family who lost their lives attempting to seek asylum, on the 30th of October 2020 in Dover, United Kingdom. The loss of an entire family was completely avoidable, Resoul Iran-Nejad, Shiva Mohammed Panahi and their children Anita (age 9), Armin (age 6) and Artin (age 15 months) lost their lives needlessly, campaigners are calling for a Safe Passage Now for Refugees.
    UK-Dover-Candlelit-Vigil-8482.jpg
  • Locals gathered on Dover seafront for a candlelit vigil to mark the tragic death of the Kurdish-Iranian family who lost their lives attempting to seek asylum, on the 30th of October 2020 in Dover, United Kingdom. The loss of an entire family was completely avoidable, Resoul Iran-Nejad, Shiva Mohammed Panahi and their children Anita (age 9), Armin (age 6) and Artin (age 15 months) lost their lives needlessly, campaigners are calling for a Safe Passage Now for Refugees.
    UK-Dover-Candlelit-Vigil-8618.jpg
  • Locals gathered on Dover seafront for a candlelit vigil to mark the tragic death of the Kurdish-Iranian family who lost their lives attempting to seek asylum, on the 30th of October 2020 in Dover, United Kingdom. The loss of an entire family was completely avoidable, Resoul Iran-Nejad, Shiva Mohammed Panahi and their children Anita (age 9), Armin (age 6) and Artin (age 15 months) lost their lives needlessly, campaigners are calling for a Safe Passage Now for Refugees.
    UK-Dover-Candlelit-Vigil-8500.jpg
  • Douglas Hurd MP feeds ducks with his family near the family home in the summer of 1990 near Oxford. Douglas Richard Hurd, Baron Hurd of Westwell, CH, CBE, PC b1930 is a British Conservative politician who served in the governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major from 1979 to 1995.
    douglas_hurd02-01-06-1990.jpg
  • Religious lifestyle choices seen in a faded picture of Christian family morals, outside a Catholic church, on 18th July 2016, at Costa Novo, near Aveira, Portugal. Fading and suffering from green algae, the picture of the perfect family who attend Mass is seen in front of the tall cross and building exterior. There are an estimated nine million baptised Catholics in Portugal 84% of the population, in twenty dioceses, served by 2,789 priests. 19% of the national population attend mass and take the sacraments regularly.
    portugal_costanova-01-18-07-2016.jpg
  • Family eating in restaurant and and sleeping homeless man in central London doorway. With a theme of stripes that appear on the window and the walls of the doorway, we see the wealth of a modern society where a father can feed his family at the table - versus the poverty of the unfortunate, a man so desperate he has to sleep in the open air on a hot Spring day, his hand outstretched asking for passers-by to offer loose change in a crushed pot. The latest annual figures show that 6,437 people were seen rough sleeping in London in 2012-13, compared with 5,768 the previous year, a 13% rise year on year and an increase of 62% since 2010-11.
    homeless_stripes03-09-04-2015_1.jpg
  • A family walk along a town's side street during summer time in the early 1960s. A small boy is accompanied by his older sister who points at something in the distance, his mother wearing pearls behind and a family friend who holds his hand as the walk towards the town's new shopping precinct. The picture was recorded on a film camera by the boy's father, an amateur photographer in 1962. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    60s_family05-13-08-1962_1.jpg
  • Dragging a baby's buggy as family members go out for a walk on open snowbound countryside in North Somerset. It is Boxing Day, the day after Christmas and the traditional family walk is more of an event this year with much of Britain covered in heavy snows during a particularly nasty period of climactic freezing conditions. Rather than push, a father pulls his child's buggy through the snow accompanied by another man and a younger boy all of whose legs are in the same walking positions. The female members of the group are out of this picture and in the way that walks often play out, females and males speak with their own gender. The landscape is that of a rural hill with a grey sky filled with more snow cloud and bare wintry trees are behind, their branches bare.
    snow_walk14-26-12-2010_1.jpg
  • Seen from a hillside opposite, with the clear blue backdrop of the snow-covered Himalayan mountain peaks, a Nepalese family crouch on the hilltop to rest during a family walk from their community village near Gorkha, Central Nepal. In the middle of the picture, a young girl twirls and dances across the clearing as her parents and siblings watch, drawfed by the powerfully- dominant range of natural features that form part of the highest altitudes on earth although Gorkha is only 3281 feet (about 1000 meters) above sea level. These peoples' homes cling to the sides of impressive mountains that draw tens of thousands of travellers to this region to trek the paths and conservation sanctuaries of this fast-developing Buddhist and Hindu Kingdom.
    RB_051-10-11-1996.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen woth his smiling wife Michelle and young family after speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago the night of their election victory. Their faces merge together in a moment of television merging of images, large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The First Family have become household names and their lives  are about to change forever before they move into the White House. Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night60-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A Nepali family consisting of parents and young children   outside their home in the central region of the Himalayan mountain kingdom. Children and adults are near a dry stone wall in a foothill dwelling near the town of Gorkha where the British army traditionally find young men for the Gurkha regiment (as thay have done since 1857). The family are wearing clean clothes with bright colours and appear healthy despite this country - and especially for those living at altitude - being one of the world's poorest. The prospects for these children may mean they will in future try to seek work in the cities like Kathmandu rather than face a lifetime's struggle in local agriculture. Their supplies and contact with the outside world comes up from tracks of boulders and stone along which either men or yaks carry up food for basic survival and luxury goods.
    nepali_family01-12-12-1997.jpg
  • A family of three members covered with aviation and aerospace badges and knitted-plane jumpers during the bi-annual aerospace industry expo at the Farnborough airshow in southern England. Eccentric and obsessive, the family members look odd and ill-at-ease with their matching jumbers and adorned with dozens of collectable badges and pins loved by aviation groupies.
    farnborough11-06-01-2003_1.jpg
  • A circus family poses for a portrait outside their big top tent before performing at another local show in south London. The family members are from the well-known Czech Faltiny Troupe who are travelling here on a European tour with Gerry Cottle's Circus in 1990. Wearing traditional the costumes of east European performers, the adults and their children look happy with their lives in the circus ring.
    circus_family01-28-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Foire Gras and dairy farming family's women experience hardships together during breakfast at their home in Alsace. The Kesslers live on the farm in the quiet village of Boofzheim in Alsace, France. Their business is producing Foie Gras and they raise force-fed ducks near the German border region. The youngest member is their daughter with head in her hands. Beside her, her mother reads the local newspaper by the window and her grandmother who has just served breakfast. The family farm produces the French delicacy called Foie Gras so early mornings and long days are required. France produces and consumes the most Foie Gras in Europe using the French Gavage method of forcing ducks or geese to consume vast quantities of corn mash down the oesophagus two weeks before slaughter.
    alsace_family01-13-10-1997_1.jpg
  • Margaret Nakazi with her 5 children standing in front of the family farm-house. Her husband has recently passed away, she supplies all the family food.
    13-07-uganda_5246.jpg
  • Locals gathered on Dover seafront for a candlelit vigil to mark the tragic death of the Kurdish-Iranian family who lost their lives attempting to seek asylum, on the 30th of October 2020 in Dover, United Kingdom. The loss of an entire family was completely avoidable, Resoul Iran-Nejad, Shiva Mohammed Panahi and their children Anita (age 9), Armin (age 6) and Artin (age 15 months) lost their lives needlessly, campaigners are calling for a Safe Passage Now for Refugees.
    UK-Dover-Candlelit-Vigil-8567.jpg
  • Locals gathered on Dover seafront for a candlelit vigil to mark the tragic death of the Kurdish-Iranian family who lost their lives attempting to seek asylum, on the 30th of October 2020 in Dover, United Kingdom. The loss of an entire family was completely avoidable, Resoul Iran-Nejad, Shiva Mohammed Panahi and their children Anita (age 9), Armin (age 6) and Artin (age 15 months) lost their lives needlessly, campaigners are calling for a Safe Passage Now for Refugees.
    UK-Dover-Candlelit-Vigil-8641.jpg
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