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Elizabeth Dalziel

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Elizabeth Dalziel

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  • Apartment blocks are seen from the window of a facing building in Chongqing, China, Sunday, Nov. 2, 2008.
    CHINA MEGACITIES 10
  • A woman looks outside of her window in Chongqing, China, Sunday, Nov. 2, 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 07
  • A North Korean girl looks out from the window of an electrically powered bus in Pyongyang, North Korea Tuesday Aug. 7, 2007.
    NORTH KOREA 02
  • Discarded computer keyboards lie in a pile in the street 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. Such pollution could be mitigated by moves to recycle and properly dispose of so-called electronic waste that are gaining ground in the West.
    CHINA E-WASTE 04
  • Protesters show letters detailing their complaints and asking for justice as they are taken away by police outside of the Foreign Ministry  Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec.10, 2008. Two dozen people held a bold protest using the 60th anniversary of the declaration of human rights to decry a myriad of alleged government abuses.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 01
  • A Chinese petitioner takes a  2 hour ride to the city to air her grievances in hopes to have her case seen by the petitions office in  Beijing, China, Tuesday, March 3, 2009.Widespread frustration with the petition system is simmering and in several recent cases has boiled over, with a handful of people making desperate bids for attention. The peak season for the pilgrimages is the beginning of March, when China's lawmakers gather in the capital for their once-a-year legislative session. In an acknowledgement that the petition system is in crisis, China's Premier Wen Jiabao vowed to improve legal channels for grievances.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 05
  • A soft toy adorns the bullet riddled windshield of a car on the road to the West Bank refugee camp of Jenin  April 19, 2002. The Jenin camp was the scene of a week of intense fighting between Israeli troops and Palestinian gunmen. The Palestinians say hundreds died, including civilians, when Israeli forces demolished more than 100 homes.
    MIDEAST JENIN 01
  • 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 couple walks along a street lined with apartment buildings, seen through the window of a taxi cab, in Chongqing, China, Friday, Oct. 31, 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 08
  • Postings for real estate are advertised on the window of property agents in Shanghai, China, Friday, May 29, 2009.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 06
  • A man looks out from the window of his home at his apartment complex in Shanghai, China, Saturday, May 30, 2009. 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 01
  • Three children of the 70 members in the Karaki family listen to exchange of fire between Palestinians and Israelis taking place outside of her home in the West Bank town of Hebron Friday Oct. 27, 2000. throughout a month of violence Karaki and 40,000 other Palestinian residents of central Hebron have endured a round the clock curfew that's kept them under house arrest and rendered their city in to a ghost town.
    MIDEAST INTIFADA CHILDREN 05
  • 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
  • Chinese soldiers stand guard during the second plenary session of the National People's Congress in Beijing's Great Hall of the People, China, Monday, March 9, 2009.The Great Hall of the people's with it's impressive Stalinist building style and attention to protocol remains as one of the the country's last showcases  of old style communism on a grand scale.
    XED102.JPG
  • A young boy walks along a street lined with compacted electronic waste  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. China's growing consumption of computers, cell phones and other gadgets poses new challenges, which much of the waste ending up in Guiyu and similar areas now coming from within the country.
    CHINA E-WASTE 10
  • Pedestrians walk along side high rises in Beijing, China, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 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 14
  • Statues line up the entrance to an apartment building in Chongqing, China, Friday, Oct. 31, 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 14
  • An add for an urban development is advertised at the entrance to a building in Chongqing, China, Saturday, Nov. 1, 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 12
  • Chinese play football in a green area set against the back drop of apartment buildings in Shanghai, China, Saturday, May 30, 2009. 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 11
  • A poster showing the projected view of an urban development on display at the site where investors plan to build it Beijing, China, Tuesday, Nov. 11, 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 09
  • A man works out in a common green area at an apartment complex in Shanghai, China, Saturday, May 30, 2009. 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 04
  • Workers in an office speak in Beijing, China, Monday, Oct. 27, 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 03
  • A young woman commutes across the city of Chongqing in a cable car in  China, Sunday, Nov. 2, 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 02
  • Dancers from the National Ballet of China rehearse at the their studio in Beijing, China, Friday, Aug. 21, 2009.  For Chinese, ballet is tangled up with China's blood-soaked revolutionary past, arriving here in the 1950s on a wave of pro-Soviet fervor and quickly repurposed as a propaganda weapon during the Cultural Revolution.
    CHINA BALLET 06
  • A movie backdrop is seen at a film studio in Mumbai, India, December 8, 2004.
    INDIA BOLLYWOOD 02
  • Men stand outside the Alfred Movie theater in Mumbai, December 8,2004. (Elizabeth Dalziel)
    INDIA BOLLYWOOD 03
  • Ben's hand prints seen against the sun stain his bedroom  window at home in Berkhamsted, England Saturday, June 6, 2015. This project has let me see photographs where before I thought there were none. It has allowed me to see the universality of my life and how it is reflected in so many other lives. I take a photo of Ben's hand prints etched on the glass of the window, set against the afternoon sun, and another mother talks to me of her own life, her own choices, her own son's hand prints. This project has let me see photographs where before I thought there were none. It has allowed me to see the universality of my life and how it is reflected in so many other lives. (Elizabeth Dalziel) #thesecretlifeofmothers #bringinguptheboys #dailylife
    THE SECRET LIFE OF MOTHERS CONTACT P...JPG
  • The boys look out the window at the ice cream shop  Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016 (Elizabeth Dalziel) #thesecretlifeofmothers #bringinguptheboys #dailylife
    THE SECRET LIFE OF MOTHERS CONTACT P...JPG
  • The boys look out the window at the ice cream shop  Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016 (Elizabeth Dalziel) #thesecretlifeofmothers #bringinguptheboys #dailylife
    ICE CREAM shop.JPG
  • A villager shows a picture of the late King Birendra of Nepal, who was murdered in alongside 10 other members of the royal family in 2001, is seen in  a heart shaped window in the wallet of a villager in the district of Rukum, viewed as the Maoist heartland Friday April 23, 2004. The Maoists, who say they are inspired by Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, have been battling since February 1996 to replace the monarchy with a communist state. The current Nepali King Gyanendra, faces besides tackling the insurgency, daily protests in the capital for dumping a democratically elected government in 2002.
    NEPAL MAOIST 11