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  • Man planting his onions on a French small holding, 27th August 2007, Lagrasse, France.
    _O7F9778_1.jpg
  • Portrait of smallholder/farmer Karma holding a bucket of milk after hand milking one of his 11 cows in the Tang Valley, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash.
    A0030876cc_1.jpg
  • A Brokpa farmer hand making fresh cow's milk butter by hand, Thagthi village, Eastern Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash or traded with neighbouring villages for daily necessities.
    A0030787cc_1.jpg
  • Smallholder/farmer Karma holds a bucket of milk after hand milking one of his 11 cows in the Tang Valley, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash.
    A0030874cc_1.jpg
  • Freshly made butter on the kitchen floor of a Brokpa ethnic minority house in Thagthi, Eastern Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash or traded with neighbouring villages for daily necessities.
    A0030797cc_1.jpg
  • A Brokpa farmer shaping fresh cow's milk butter by hand, Thagthi village, Eastern Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash or traded with neighbouring villages for daily necessities.
    A0030824cc_1.jpg
  • Smallholder/farmer Karma hand milking one of his 11 cows in the Tang Valley, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash.
    A0030870cc_1.jpg
  • A Brokpa woman making 'Datse', a small handmade cheese made from cow's milk. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash or traded with neighbouring villages for daily necessities.
    A0030818cc_1.jpg
  • Freshly made butter on the kitchen floor of a Brokpa ethnic minority house in Thagthi, Eastern Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers and herders make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash or traded with neighbouring villages for daily necessities.
    A0030830cc_1.jpg
  • A Brokpa ethnic minority woman holding potatoes covered in earth after harvesting from her vegetable garden in Thagthi village in Eastern Bhutan
    A0030757cc_1.jpg
  • A Brokpa ethnic minority woman holding potatoes covered in earth after harvesting from her vegetable garden in Thagthi village in Eastern Bhutan
    A0030760cc_1.jpg
  • Dhenchen Chezom weaves a woollen yathra skarf on a Tibetan style loom outside her farmhouse in the Tang Valley, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Yathra is a hand woven fabric made from the wool of sheep and yak and is the most famous textile product of Bumthang. Yathra cloth is made into skarfs, jackets, blankets; table cloths and bags.
    A0030836cc_1.jpg
  • A Brokpa farmer hand churn's cow's milk to make into butter, Thagthi village, Eastern Bhutan. The Brokpa are a semi-nomadic tribe whose source of livelihood is dependent on yaks and sheep, the products of which they trade with neighbouring villages for daily necessities.
    A0030771cc_1.jpg
  • In a field at the town of Boofzheim in the eastern French Alsace region, an elderly Frenchman harvests some of his self-grown carrots crop. Having left his old bicycle standing at the kerb of a narrow access road and in front of a field full of maturing maize, he bends down with much effort to dig in his fork or spade into the rich Alsace earth and lift out his vegetables to take home. This landscape is typically French or German (Alsace borders the western side of Germany and saw much tragic action in WW2) where maize is a nutritious foodstuff for cattle and also for ducks and geese who are force-fed it locally in the making of fois gras and pate.
    french_farmer10-12-1997_1.jpg
  • Du Cai Mei prepares breakfast in her cave dwelling / house, Chang Qu village, Shaanxi, China
    chiocave_003_1.jpg
  • Soo Tou, 29, in the living room of his new home. Soo Tou and wife Ren Way, 26, are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Streung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031764cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks. There is a communal hand pump outside for water, but this is not good for drinking.
    A0031746cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031752cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares.
    A0031702cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. [pictured Bopha, 3 [*name changed] outside the family home in Kbal Romeas village
    A0031668cc_1.jpg
  • Ren Way, 26 in the kitchen of her new home. Ren Way and her husband Soo Tou, 29 are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Streung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031760cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031744cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. [pictured with daughter Romduol Char, 5 and son Makary Char 14 [*names changed]
    A0031708cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    DSCF6081cc_1.jpg
  • Soo Tou, 29 outside his new home in a relocation village, Steung Treng province, Cambodia. Soo Tou and his wife Ren Way, 26 are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Steung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    DSCF6094cc_1.jpg
  • Soo Tou, 29, and wife Ren Way, 26, are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Streung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031757cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031740cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. [pictured with daughter Romduol Char, 5 [*name changed]
    A0031723cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char's daughter asleep in a hammock in the family home in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares.
    A0031685cc_1.jpg
  • Jaime Huenchullan, is a farmer  and a Werken, which means  messenger in Mapuche  cosmology he is also a political activist. He became very well known in 2018 news for having being arrested and accused of terrorism together with his two brothers and seven other Mapuches for vandalising and torching forestry trucks. During their trial it became evident that the so called proof had been planted by the police in the form of false information posted onto their WhatsApp messages and other telefone interceps. Since his prison release he lives with his family on land reclaimed from big land owners where he tends to his livestock and his vegetable patch.  Like most rural Mapuches they are self sufficient, Temulemu, near Temuco, Chile. February 16, 2018.
    20180216_chile_mapuches_166.jpg
  • Jaime Huenchullan, is a farmer  and a Werken, which means  messenger in Mapuche  cosmology he is also a political activist. He became very well known in 2018 news for having being arrested and accused of terrorism together with his two brothers and seven other Mapuches for vandalising and torching forestry trucks. During their trial it became evident that the so called proof had been planted by the police in the form of false information posted onto their WhatsApp messages and other telefone interceps. Since his prison release he lives with his family on land reclaimed from big land owners where he tends to his livestock and his vegetable patch.  Like most rural Mapuches they are self sufficient, Temulemu, near Temuco, Chile. February 16, 2018.
    20180216_chile_mapuches_194.jpg
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