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Elizabeth Dalziel

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Elizabeth Dalziel

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  • Chinese men smoke and play cards by the side of the river in the outskirts of Shanghai, China May 10, 2005.
    CHINA DAILY LIFE 01
  • A man commutes on the fast train from Tianjing to  Beijing, China, Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008. Block after city block, towers of concrete, steel and glass fill the skyline teeming and congested, the intensely urban landscapes of China's biggest cities show a glimpse of what the future will hold for the rest of the country. In the sprawling megacities of Beijing, Shanghai and Chongqing, where populations exceed 10 million people, extreme urban density means that the number of people living within a few square blocks here is equal to the population of entire mid-size U.S. cities. China's urban population soared to 607 million people last year _ nearly equaling the 700 million living in the countryside. The country's headlong plunge toward urbanization continues unabated as tens of millions of migrants from the countryside flood to cities in search of money, jobs and other opportunities.
    CHINA MEGACITIES 13
  • A Palestinian father smokes a cigarette and drinks coffee next to his infant daughter who sleeps under a makeshift tent on the sands of the Mediterranean coast of Gaza City  Friday July 27, 2001. Despite the 11 months of violence Israelis and Palestinians take a break to enjoy the Mediterranean beaches and the Dead Sea, where under growing tensions and in the case of Gaza under closure people try to  make the best of their summer and carry on a normal life.
    TALE OF TWO BEACHES 15
  • Ben gives Joe a drink of water from the hose as they play in their paddling pool in our back yard at home in Berkhamsted, England Tuesday, June 16, 2015 (Elizabeth Dalziel) #thesecretlifeofmothers #bringinguptheboys #dailylife
    THE SECRET LIFE OF MOTHERS CONTACT P...JPG
  • A man sorts through trash in an area where much of the world's electronic waste _ from cell phone chargers to mainframe computers _ ends up in Guiyu and other small towns like it in eastern China, Thursday March 16, 2006. Workers, many of them poorly paid migrants strip, smash and melt down circuit boards, mainly to extract the copper and other precious metals inside. The business has created massive pollution from leaded glass and other toxic materials. A water sample taken from the site revealed lead levels 2,400 times higher than the World Health Organization's limit for drinking water.
    CHINA E-WASTE 07
  • Heaps of electronic lie at a dumping site in an area where much of the world's electronic waste _ from cell phone chargers to mainframe computers _ ends up in Guiyu and other small towns like it in eastern China, Thursday March 16, 2006. Workers, many of them poorly paid migrants strip, smash and melt down circuit boards, mainly to extract the copper and other precious metals inside. The business has created massive pollution from leaded glass and other toxic materials. A water sample taken from the site revealed lead levels 2,400 times higher than the World Health Organization's limit for drinking water.
    CHINA E-WASTE 12
  • Workers unload electronic waste from trucks as seen from a hidden position inside of a vehicle, in an area where much of the world's electronic waste _ from cell phone chargers to mainframe computers _ ends up in Guiyu and other small towns like it in eastern China, Thursday March 16, 2006. Workers, many of them poorly paid migrants strip, smash and melt down circuit boards, mainly to extract the copper and other precious metals inside. The business has created massive pollution from leaded glass and other toxic materials. A water sample taken from the site revealed lead levels 2,400 times higher than the World Health Organization's limit for drinking water.
    CHINA E-WASTE 02
  • A poluted water stream runs by homes in an area where much of the world's electronic waste _ from cell phone chargers to mainframe computers _ ends up in Guiyu and other small towns like it in eastern China, Thursday March 16, 2006. Workers, many of them poorly paid migrants strip, smash and melt down circuit boards, mainly to extract the copper and other precious metals inside. The business has created massive pollution from leaded glass and other toxic materials. A water sample taken from the site revealed lead levels 2,400 times higher than the World Health Organization's limit for drinking water.
    CHINA E-WASTE 05