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  • Carrying recent sketches of the Gherkin and the Lloyds of London Building, foreign students of Architecture and the work of Sir Norman Foster, walk through the City of London, the capitals ancient, financial district, on 14th May, in London, England.
    city_people-16-14-05-2019.jpg
  • A group of foreign students sit on the steps in Trafalgar Square, on 9th May 2018, in London, England.
    trafalgar_group-04-09-05-2018.jpg
  • A group of foreign students sit on the steps in Trafalgar Square, on 9th May 2018, in London, England.
    trafalgar_group-03-09-05-2018.jpg
  • A group of foreign students sit on the steps in Trafalgar Square, on 9th May 2018, in London, England.
    trafalgar_group-05-09-05-2018.jpg
  • On the day that the UK Governments Chief Scientific Advisor, Sir Patrick Vallance said that the Coronavirus Covid-19 outbreak was now spreading person to person in the UK, foreign students wearing surgical masks walk along Aldwych during their lunch-hours, from nearby London School of Economics LSE, on 6th March 2020, in London, England.
    cornavirus-04-06-03-2020.jpg
  • Immediately after their graduation ceremonies, new graduates meet relatives and family outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-28-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Immediately after their graduation ceremonies, new graduates meet relatives and family outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-27-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-31-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-26-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung,, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-12-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-24-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-20-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrates her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-17-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-22-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-23-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrates her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-15-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-11-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-10-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-02-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Immediately after their graduation ceremonies, new graduates meet relatives and family outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-32-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-07-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-03-22-07-2019.jpg
  • On the day that the UK Governments Chief Scientific Advisor, Sir Patrick Vallance said that the Coronavirus Covid-19 outbreak was now spreading person to person in the UK, a foreign student wears a surgical mask while walking along Aldwych during his lunch-hour, from nearby London School of Economics LSE, on 6th March 2020, in London, England.
    cornavirus-06-06-03-2020.jpg
  • Two young men talk on a wall near the faces of past alumni a wall outside King's College London University on the Strand, during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, and when the capital is designated by the government as a Tier 2 restriction, on 20th October 2020, in London, England.
    university_alumni01-20-10-2020.jpg
  • Teenage girl students sit on the sports field at the Gyosei International Japanese School, a boarding school for Japanese ex-pats opened in 1987 in Willen Park, Milton Keynes, England. The two girls lie on their fronts on clipped grass in the middle of their sports field, the main school building seen in the beckground. Holding on to a football, they're laughing at the antics of unseen school friends, they enjoy the summer's afternoon in the English Midlands.
    japanese_students-18-06-1994_1.jpg
  • A group of American interior design students sketch buildings adjacent while sitting on steps of public building in Florence's Piazza Di Annunziata. The small class is made up mostly of young women and there is a young man who is apparently teaching one woman how to capture the finer points of the architecture opposite. They all have sketchpads on their laps and are either looking into the distance, memorising the landscapes - or using pencils to reproduce these features on to paper. Florence and other Italian cities are full of young Americans studying music and painting, art and design, completing and complimenting US-based courses often as foreign exchange students or as residential terms.
    florence_italy40-22-10-2010_1.jpg
  • Two students study outside at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. Writing up notes and reading course work, the two young men sit on wooden steps with other students. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university62-02-11-2010.jpg
  • A poster showing a utopian beach is seen outside the Victoria offices of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel Student Travel Australia was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding DKH and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel11-24-08-2020.jpg
  • A poster showing a utopian beach is seen outside the Victoria offices of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel Student Travel Australia was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding DKH and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel08-24-08-2020.jpg
  • A poster showing a utopian beach is seen outside the Victoria offices of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel Student Travel Australia was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding DKH and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel07-24-08-2020.jpg
  • Young men study at workstations in communal area at London Metropilitan University's Holloway Road campus. While one taps numbers on a calculator, another writes up course notes. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university67-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Teenage students play baseball on a summer's day at the Gyosei International Japanese School, a boarding school for Japanese ex-pats opened in 1987 in Willen Park, Milton Keynes, England. Running hard for a home-run, the teenager sprints on short grass as school mates sit waiting for their turn on the lawn. The Gyosei independent private school was the first of its type established in the country and shows the importance of Milton Keynes as a focus for Japanese investment.
    japanese_baseball-18-06-1994_1.jpg
  • Young man studies at workstation in communal area at London Metropilitan University's Holloway Road campus. The male taps numbers on a calculator while others lounge around in the background. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university75-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Young men study at workstations in communal area at London Metropilitan University's Holloway Road campus. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university74-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Teenage girl students sit on the sports field during a lunchtime break at the Gyosei International Japanese School, a boarding school for Japanese ex-pats opened in 1987 in Willen Park, Milton Keynes, England. Giggling and smiling in their happy environment, the young women enjoy life in the UK, the children of skilled parents working in England. The Gyosei independent private school was the first of its type established in the country and shows the importance of Milton Keynes as a focus for Japanese investment.
    japanese_teenagers-18-06-1994_1.jpg
  • Teenage students jump high on a basketball court to score a goal at the Gyosei International Japanese School, a boarding school for Japanese ex-pats opened in 1987 in Willen Park, Milton Keynes, England. Seen from an aerial perspective, we look down on these active and fit young men, whose sense of competition and fitness is played out below us. Leaping up to help win the ball that is about to be placed in the foreground basket, each of the seven boys try their utmost to help win or prevent the point, depending on the team members. The court looks new and well cared for at this ex-patriot school in the English Midlands
    basketball_jump01-26-01-2011_1.jpg
  • A greeting driver attempts to identify one of his passengers from a group of non-English-speaking young people who have just arrived off a flight from Beijing. In the hectic international arrivals concourse of Heathrow's Terminal 5, the man hold up a name board to attract the attention of those Chinese nationals who are new students at a Bournemouth language college called Education First (EF), based on England's south coast. With the help of a chaperone, the man points to a young girl in the hope she might be on his list. Neither speak each other's mother tongue and the language barrier is difficult to overcome. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport424-13-07-2009_1.jpg
  • Greeting drivers await their passengers to arrive off a flight from Beijing. In the hectic international arrivals concourse of Heathrow's Terminal 5, the men hold up name boards to attract the attention of those Chinese nationals who are new students at a Bournemouth language college called Education First (EF), based on England's south coast. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport403-13-07-2009_1.jpg
  • Greeting drivers await their passengers to arrive off a flight from Beijing. In the hectic international arrivals concourse of Heathrow's Terminal 5, the men hold up name boards to attract the attention of those Chinese nationals who are new students at a Bournemouth language college called Education First (EF), based on England's south coast. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport403-13-07-2009_1 1.jpg
  • Young people and their leader on a foreign schooltrip walk through in Trafalgar Square, Westminster, on 9th April 2019, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-06-09-04-2019.jpg
  • Four men of Asian appearance share a funny moment while eating lunch in a City of London park. Sat on a park corner wall near St Paul's cathedral, the 4 munch and bite their sandwiches and pies bought nearby. One has shared a humerous moment and the others react at the apparent joke. The small green space is located in the City of London, the capital's financial financial heart and historic centre founded by the Romans in AD43 but now the point of focus for Britain's economy.
    students_lunch01-17-10-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A female student from Singapore celebrates her end of Chemistry Finals (exams)  at Trinity College, Oxford. With glitter sticking to her dark hair, this talented international Asian student smiles with great relief and intends to celebrate the end of her examinations at Oxford by partying with friends. In celebration of this achievement, of surviving the pressure and stress of the last examinations, students all over the city in the same fortunate position, often carry bottles of alcohol to their residences where the partying continues, shared by contemporaries and friends. In the street, the young lady from Singapore pauses before walking along Catte Street, past the Bodleian Library. Oxford is the third oldest surviving university in the world and the oldest surviving in the English-speaking world. Foreigners make up one third of the student body.
    oxford_student02-08-06-2010.jpg
  • Three young tourists boys carry identical tour rucksacks beneath blue banners across Regent Street, central London. From a low angle we look up to the lads making their way beneath the banners that hang across one of the capital's bust shopping streets. Their matching blue packs have perhaps been given to them by Study Tours, an organisation offering cheap student travel, guided student tours, weekend tours and day trips.
    city_people19-06-07-2015.jpg
  • Puran Bhatt, a puppeteer, on his roof. Puran is an international star with a master class every year in France. Many foreign puppet students come to stay at his house to be taught by him. Shadipur Depot, New Delhi, India<br />
The Kathiputli Colony in the Shadipur Depot slum is home to hundreds of (originally Rajasthani) performers. The artistes who live here - from magicians, acrobats, musicians, dancers and puppeteers are often international renowed by always return to the Shadipur slum.
    sfe_020717_0042.jpg
  • Puran Bhatt, a puppeteer, on his roof. Puran is an international star with a master class every year in France. Many foreign puppet students come to stay at his house to be taught by him. Shadipur Depot, New Delhi, India<br />
The Kathiputli Colony in the Shadipur Depot slum is home to hundreds of (originally Rajasthani) performers. The artistes who live here - from magicians, acrobats, musicians, dancers and puppeteers are often international renowed by always return to the Shadipur slum.
    sfe_020717_0009.jpg
  • Wearing a large green helmet with the number 26 painted on the front, a worried-looking black soldier recruit gazes into the distance in front of a white army  instructor at the large Garrison at Catterick, England. Here, the Parachute Regiment (The Paras) - hold part of their famous basic training programme called Pegasus (P) Company. The most notorious selection procedure in the British Army. After initial recruitment, each student is sent to either pass or fail a set of 9 events from which a total score of 90 points is possible. 58% or more passes, less fails. Events like the 18 mile Forced March followed by a further 5 miles can earn 10 points though this will inevitably prove too much for many young man, desperate to pass P Company and earn his prestigious beret (Like the Foreign Legion).
    army05-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • The legs and feet of students stand on a European map at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. The legs of  foreigners can be seen with their feet covering the countries and states of the European Union (EU) although there are no borders or political boundaries. Instead, we see the land mass of continental Europe's mainland. Also marked are names of the oceans surrounding these countries, including the Baltic, Adriatic and North Seas. The map is in London's museum that celebrates Britain's maritime history, heritage and oceanic exploration.
    europe_map02-07-09-2014_1.jpg
  • The legs and feet of students stand on a European map at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. The legs of  foreigners can be seen with their feet covering the countries and states of the European Union (EU) although there are no borders or political boundaries. Instead, we see the land mass of continental Europe's mainland. Also marked are names of the oceans surrounding these countries, including the Baltic, Adriatic and North Seas. The map is in London's museum that celebrates Britain's maritime history, heritage and oceanic exploration.
    europe_map04-07-09-2014_1.jpg
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