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Lynsey Addario

Photographer
  • Bio
  • Of Love & War
  • It's What I Do
  • Work
    • Cal Fire
    • South Sudan Floods
    • Amazon
    • Longevity
    • Covid in the UK
    • Maternal Mortality
    • The Displaced
    • Unrest in Libya
    • Korengal Valley
    • Afghanistan
    • Darfur
    • Iraq War
    • Trans Sex Workers NYC
    • Clippings
  • Fine Art Prints
  • Info
    • Contact
    • Exhibitions
    • Awards & Education
View fullsize  Fires burn along the Trans-Amazonian Highway near the Aripuana National Forest, in the state of Amazonas, in Brazil, September 2021.  Deforestation continues at extraordinary rates across the Amazon, led by land clearing for meat producers and
View fullsize  Illegal gold mining in the Amazon as seen from above in the Kayapo indigenous territory in the state of Para, in Brazil, September 22, 2021. Illegal gold miners, referred to as garimpeiros in Portuguese, cause deforestation and water pollution, plun
View fullsize  Illegal logging as seen from above in Kayapo indigenous land in the state of Para, in Brazil, September 22, 2021.
View fullsize  A slaughterhouse for cattle outside Porto Velho, Rondonia, in the Amazon in Brazil, September 2021.  Deforestation continues at extraordinary rates across the Amazon, led by land clearing for meat producers and cattle ranchers, along with illeg
View fullsize  Loggers Franquino and Charlie cut down a Rochino tree in the forest about 1000 meters from indigenous land in the Amazon forest in the state of Rondonia, September 15, 2021.  It is illegal to log anywhere in the Amazon, though the loggers claim they
View fullsize  Loggers Franquino and Charlie cut down a Rochino tree in the forest about 1000 meters from indigenous land in the Amazon forest in the state of Rondonia, September 15, 2021.  It is illegal to log anywhere in the Amazon, though the loggers claim they
View fullsize  A cowboy herds cattle into a ranch along the trans-Amazonian highway in the state of Amazonas, in Brazil, September 2021. The trans-Amazonian highway, once covered by a canopy of trees, is now mostly populated by ranches, where trees have been cut d
View fullsize  Tejubi Uru eu Wau Wau, 21, rests while fishing in the jaru river along with other members of the Uru eu Wau Wau tribe near village 623, in Rondonia, in the Amazon, in Brazil. 
View fullsize  Tejubi Uru eu Wau Wau, 2, from the Uru eu Wau Wau walks through indigenous land owned by her tribe which has been taken over by ranchers, who have illegally burned the land and are making cattle ranches across great partitions of what was formerly f
View fullsize  Tejubi Uru eu Wau Wau, 21, plays with her daughter, Gabrielle, 2, in their village of 621, in Rondonia, in the Amazon, in Brazil.  
View fullsize  Indigenous leader and first female chief, O.E. Paiakan Kayapo, 38 yrs, has her face painted by her aunt, Tuire Kayapo—who was one of the first outspoken indigenous women about the harmful effects of climate change on the indigenous communities and l
View fullsize  Indigenous leader and first female chief, O.E. Paiakan Kayapo, 38 yrs, listens to Indigenous leader, Sônia Guajajara, while participating on a zoom call with indigenous leaders from all over Brazil from a restaurant in Redencao, in Para state, in th
View fullsize  Indigenous leader and first female chief, O.E. Paiakan Kayapo, 38 yrs, conducts a radio call from her home with other indigenous chiefs from the Kayapo tribe at home with her family in Redencao, in  the state of Para, in Brazil, September 23, 2
View fullsize  Alessandra Korap, 37, of the Munduruku tribe, conducts a boat patrol up the Jamachind river off the Tapajos river with Chief Juarez, 61, while monitoring illegal mining in and along the river on tribal land in the Amazon, in Brazil, September 19, 20
View fullsize  Alessandra Korap, 37, a female leader and climate change activist from the Munduruku tribe, meets with members of the Sawre Muybu village at the base of the village before setting off on a patrol to monitor illegal mining in the Munduruku territory
View fullsize  Alessandra Korap, 37, a female leader and climate change activist from the Munduruku tribe. Alessandra is a well-known climate change activist and indigenous leader in Brazil, and one of the women fighting against climate change.
View fullsize  Alessandra Korap, 37, a female leader and climate change activist from the Munduruku tribe, meets with members of the Sawre Muybu village the day after a patrol to monitor illegal mining in the Munduruku territory in the state of Para, in the Amazon
View fullsize  Gilmara Akai Munduruku, 28, looks over an Avon catalogue after ordering beauty products from Avon to sell in the Sawre Muybu village, in the Munduruku indigenous territory in the state of Para, in the Amazon, in Brazil, September 19, 2021.  Gilmara
View fullsize  Alessandra Korap, 37, a female leader and climate change activist from the Munduruku tribe, watches a game show via satellite while resting in the Sawre Muybu village after a patrol to monitor illegal mining in the Munduruku territory in the state o