Showing posts with label Sustainability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sustainability. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Photography & Photojournalism In Vietnam By Aaron Joel Santos Now On Gaia Photos



Farmer Nguyen Van Duoc pauses to look out over his farmlands in Hanoi, Vietnam.

Photo © Aaron Joel Santos All Rights Reserved  Follow Me On Twitter


Vietnam: Urban Farmers In Hanoi is a new photo story now appearing on Gaia Photos. As photojournalist Aaron Joel Santos explains,

"Vietnam’s capital is at a critical junction, balanced precariously between its past and present, trying to maintain a certain sense of culture and identity while integrating further into the global economy. Rice fields and farmlands are being overtaken by new highways, skyscrapers and industrial areas. The lakes and rivers for which the city was once known are drying up and suffering from increased levels of pollution. And urban farmers who have relied on their families’ lands for generations are being slowly edged off their fields in the name of progress."

Please view the entire story about urban farmers coping with modernity in Vietnam on Gaia Photos.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aaron Joel Santos grew up in New Orleans, Louisiana and graduated from schools in San Francisco and Boston before moving to Vietnam in 2007. These days, Aaron is an editorial and documentary photographer based out of Hanoi and working for clients across Southeast Asia. He is represented by Wonderful Machine in the United States & Invision Images across Europe and Japan. Aaron's work has been shown in a number of international magazines and publications, including The Wall Street Journal and Travel + Leisure Southeast Asia, as well as in galleries in the US, Malaysia and Vietnam. He's a fan of warm weather, cheap beer and friendly people.

You can also search for assignment photographers at Gaia Photos, a place to explore and discover the issues facing the diverse population and locations of our world, both near and far.

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John Brown Photojournalist On LIGHTSTALKERS

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Kono Matsu Gives The Neophyte Bioeconomist A Grounding In The History And Impact Of The Current Money Paradigm


Kono Matsu wonders if we are passing a time bomb on to future generations.

Photo © John Brown All Rights Reserved

In these days of mortgage meltdowns, high joblessness, global warming and fossil fuel price fluctuations, I wanted to share an article written by Kono Matsu awhile back.

Essentially, the essay warns us that whether we read about emerging or developed economies growth figures, we should ask ourselves important questions regarding the economics of environmental sustainability. From China, Cambodia and Russia to the USA and India, should we blindingly believe the political hype?

Vaclav Smil, a highly respected China scholar at Canada's University of Manitoba pegs the environmental-damage rate in China at between 5 and 15 percent, with 7 percent a "solid, defensible figure." Smil says that shorn of hype, China's growth rate is also likely 7 percent, "so basically every year environmental damage wipes out the Gross National Product (GDP) growth."

As annual growth rates get tossed around in the media at the end of 2009, perhaps perspective will help us think about what it all means.

START

Kono Matsu Gives The Neophyte Bioeconomist A Grounding In The History And Impact Of The Current Money Paradigm

We might complain about the economy, but rarely do we question the underlying paradigm. Instead, we dance, enthralled by its imperatives, surging in a frenzy of prosperity, or stalled, unemployed, in a bout of paranoia.

The "science" of economics has us under its spell. We sway to its mystical incantations: GDP, interest rates, the monetary supply. We revel in its traditions, in its formalism, in its abstract and irrelevant models of the world; where air and water are free and forests grow forever; where the worth of vanishing resources are disregarded because they cannot easily be quantified; where the wealth of a nation goes up with every automobile accident, with every oil spill, with every newly diagnosed cancer patient.

Now, a revolution is under way in the profession of economics; a radical rethinking of the assumptions that drive Western economies. In the l960s, the science of economics was riding high in public esteem. Times were good and there was no reason why they shouldn't continue. Using their Keynesian theories and econometric models, economists pulled the big levers that shaped our lives -- taxes, interest rates, government spending, the money supply -- and like a mighty ship, the economy responded.

John Maynard Keynes, the guru of Keynesian economics, predicted that economics would eventually settle down into a nuts-and-bolts profession "very much like dentistry." And it seemed he was right. The profession was not only guiding the economy but fine-tuning it as well. A Nobel Prize was introduced for this promising new science. Keynes was featured on the cover of Time magazine in an issue celebrating an age of planned prosperity; economists would manage our future according to scientific principles. The boom-bust cycles that have plagued capitalism since the industrial revolution would become a thing of the past. Richard Nixon declared, "We are all Keynesians now."

This was heady brew for economists. Their science had suddenly come into its own -- and it was a real science! -- a cut above the social sciences like sociology or anthropology. Economics had precisely measurable entities like "GNP" and "Money Supply" and real laws like the Law Of Supply and Demand. Most importantly, it had mathematics, the universal language of science, to back its claims. The profession also had a mission: to realize the utopian dream of a society without economic misery and want.

Today that dream is forgotten. The profession has fallen from grace. Since the l970s its forecasts have been consistently off the mark and ridiculed in the media. "What Good Are Economists?" asked a Newsweek headline. "It's Back to Doghouse for Economists," declared U.S. News & World Report. "Economics is not a science; it is merely politics in disguise," writes Hazel Henderson, one of the many critics snapping at the profession's heels. "How long can current economic theories continue to lumber along on the wagon wheels of 18th century logic?" wonders Barrington Nevitt.

What happened after 1970? Why did the economics profession stumble and fall? Because it ignored one simple fact: all economic systems operate within the larger economy of planet earth. The economic theories did not work because they ignored such fundamentals as the depletion of natural resources, the long term costs of polluting the environment, and many of the other "externalities" of our industrial system. It's ironic that the economics profession ignored one of its own best known dictums: If you use up your capital, you'll be heading for bankruptcy.

Learning To Subtract

"Governments have yet to admit that degrading the environment is the same as running up a debt that must eventually be paid." -- Craig Mclnnes, The Globe and Mail

In 1988, federal government officials found dioxins in shellfish and ordered a portion of the commercial shellfish fishery in Howe Sound, British Columbia closed. This bit of bad news caused hardly a ripple among economists.

A few months later the closure was widened to cover prawn, crab and oyster in the whole of Howe Sound. It was a heavy blow to the communities along Howe Sound, but for the profession of economics, it was a non-event. A little later, Ottawa extended the ban yet again. Shell fishing was banned in nearly all coastal waters adjacent to pulp and paper mills. Was this calamity accurately reflected in our provincial or national accounting books? No. Would it register in the books if shell fishing on Howe Sound was banned and lost forever? No.

"A country could exhaust its mineral resources, cut down its forests, erode its soils, pollute its aquifers and hunt its wildlife and fisheries to extinction, but measured income would not be affected as these assets disappeared."-- World Resources Institute, Washington DC

The Tip Of The Iceberg

Besides the degradation of nature, many other important areas have traditionally been left out of our economic accounting books: the human costs of doing business, all barter transactions, illegal gambling and the drug trade; pretty well anything that is hard to measure in dollars and cents and feed into a mathematical model.

For example, a mother working at home raising children is not considered" a worker." She is treated as if she has no input or productivity to contribute to the "real" economy. Economically speaking, she doesn't exist. The abstract, logical, mostly male world of economic science has in fact less to do with the real world than the profession would have us believe.

"Women, by and large, understand what economics is really about; meeting the needs of their family, meeting the needs of their community. Men have turned economics into the sort of science where they say that there is no demand for food in India because people haven't the money to buy it. That's crazy! But in traditional economic jargon, that makes sense." -- Hunter Lovins, Rocky Mountain Institute

The Economics Of The Last Hurrah

"Every time there is a car accident, the GNP goes up." -- Ralph Nader

Joe and Mary own a small farm. They are self-reliant, growing as much of their food as possible, and providing for most of their own needs. Their two children chip in and the family has a rich home life. Their family contributes to the health of their community and the nation... but they are not good for the nation's business, because they consume so little. Joe and Mary can't make ends meet, so Joe finds a job in the city. He borrows $13,000 to buy a Toyota and drives 50 miles to work every day. The $13,000 and his yearly gas bill are added to the nation's Gross National Product (GNP).

Then Mary divorces Joe because she can't handle his bad city moods anymore. The $11,000 lawyer's fee for dividing up the farm and assets is added to the nation's GNP. The people who buy the farm develop it into townhouses at $200,000 a pop. This results in a spectacular jump in the GNP.

A year later Joe and Mary accidentally meet in a pub and decide to give it another go. They give up their city apartments, sell one of their cars and renovate a barn in the back of Mary's father's farm. They live frugally, watch their pennies and grow together as a family again. Guess what? The nation's GNP registers a fall, and the economists tell us we are worse off.

"The social costs of a polluted environment, disrupted communities, disrupted family life and eroded primary relationships may be the only part of the GNP that is growing." -- Hazel Henderson

Destroy Economics?

How much will it cost to stop acid rain? How much to mend the ozone layer? How much to halt the global warming trend? According to Peter Passell writing in the New York Times, recent studies put the price tag at trillions of dollars through the next century. According to one estimate, the United States' annual price tag could rival the current level of military spending.

That's a pretty large time bomb to pass on to future generations.
Such estimates suggest that conventional economics has become not only irrelevant but destructive. What environmentalists and a few maverick economists are calling for is a paradigm shift, a change of atmosphere and mindset within the economics profession -- a new way of doing business. from the EC 101 classroom up.

"Economy," like "ecology," gets its meaning from the Greek word oikos; which means house or home. The real business of "economics" is to manage our home, which is of course the earth. Somewhere along the way, like most of us, the economists lost sight of that.

"I think there's is a tendency for economists to escape from reality by saying, well, here is an impersonal technical apparatus which protects me from any criticism, which protects me from any attack that I'm slanting the subject. And I regret that. I think we should be willing to face our critics.-- John K. Galbraith

It's time to create a more accountable system and profession of economics. We must learn to subtract as well as add to our GNP and create a national bookkeeping that reflects the real value of things. It's time for economists to come down from their ivory towers and grapple with the messy little problems of sustaining life on a fragile planet.

"Before economics can progress, it must abandon its suicidal formalism."
-- Robert Heilbroner

Scientific Revolution

"I horrify my friends who are professional economists by saying to them in a put-down kind of fashion. 'But your discipline is just a branch of psychology. isn't it?' And they say, 'My God, we are scientists, you know, we are not in the business of psychology.'" -- Paul Sieghart, human rights lawyer

A revolution is now brewing in the economics profession. Theoretical dissension and bitter infighting between competing schools are the norm. The profession is up for grabs. Is economics a science at all? Is it a rudder through turbulent times, or an outdated discipline that must be destroyed before we can move on?

Thomas Kuhn, in his now famous 1962 book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, describes how paradigm shifts in science are very much like political revolutions. They don't unfold quickly or easily or without the painful overthrow of the people in power. Thomas Kuhn's most profound insight is that, in the real world, contrary to the way scientific progress is supposed to happen, an old paradigm cannot be replaced by evidence, facts or "the truth."

It can only be replaced by another paradigm. In other words, the profession of economics will not change just because its forecasts are wrong, its policies no longer work, or because its theories are proved to be unscientific. It will only change when a new maverick breed of economists grab the old-school practitioners by the scruff of their necks and throw them out of power.

Up to now there has been lots of serious sniping at the profession of economics. However, no dissenting paradigm has managed to gain a foothold. The old school practitioners live on, reinforced by the politics of tenure, of who gets published and promoted, whose research gets funded, and who gets plucked out of academia for plum jobs when this or that political party wins an election. In the shadow of the green revolution, neo-classical economics hangs on by the skin of its teeth.

As author Robert Kuttner put it, "In the economics profession, the free marketplace of ideas is one more market that doesn't work like the model."

END

John Brown Photojournalist On LIGHTSTALKERS
My Mondo Library Photography
My Photoshelter Photography Archive Homepage

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Photography Guest Of The Week Roberto (Bear) Guerra - USA


Photo © Roberto (Bear) Guerra All Rights Reserved

Haiti: The Coup d’Etat Is Not Over

"Since 1804, when it became the world’s first black republic after a successful slave revolt, Haiti has seen few periods of stability. Today the small Caribbean nation faces the most significant challenges of any country in the Western Hemisphere. In this failed state severe poverty, endemic corruption, high unemployment, pervasive hunger, and little access to health care mean life is a constant struggle for the majority of Haitians, and make the country almost totally reliant upon foreign aid."

Photojournalist Bear Guerra took a closer look at the complex problems he described above in his photo essay Haiti: The Coup d’Etat Is Not Over, now appearing on Gaia Photos, a new international photography source comprised of 41 photojournalists from around the world whose mission is to promote quality and diversity in documentary photography.

Independent photojournalist Bear Guerra, was recently the recipient of a Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Grant (Bolivia, 2008) for a project on coca farmers.

His photo essay on the grass-roots opposition to La Parota Dam (Mexico, 2006) was exhibited at the 2008 International World Exhibition in Zaragoza, Spain, as well as in an international traveling exhibition organized by the Foundation for a New Water Culture (FNCA) on the theme of "Water and Sustainable Development".

Other recent recognition has come from the Magenta Foundation (Flash Forward: Emerging Photographers 2007); The Santa Fe Center for Photography (2007), The Golden Light Awards (2006); American Photography 21 (2006) & 24 (2009); Shots Magazine (Documentary Issue #92); and The Society of Publication Designers (2005). Bear's work has shown in many group exhibitions; and has been published by Orion Magazine, The Boston Globe Magazine, Virginia Quarterly Review, BBC's "The World", Texas Monthly, Seed Magazine, The Sun, among others.

He has worked with non-profit organizations including Médecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), the International Rescue Committee (IRC), Foundation for a New Water Culture (FNCA), and Equipo Argentino de Antropología Forense (EAAF). Bear also collaborates regularly with his wife, journalist Ruxandra Guidi, while living in Austin, Texas, USA.

Please Visit Us and visit Bear Guerra's website. Have a look at other reportage by Bear Guerra on Gaia Photos too!

To view a multimedia piece from Haiti: The Coup d’Etat Is Not Over, please visit the International Reporting Project website.

You can also search for assignment photographers at Gaia Photos, a place to explore and discover the issues facing the diverse population and locations of our world, both near and far.

Please subscribe to our new features page to keep track of new stories too!

John Brown Photojournalist On LIGHTSTALKERS
My Mondo Library Photography
My Photoshelter Photography Archive Homepage
GAIA Photography and Photojournalism

Friday, May 15, 2009

Photographs Of Cambodia's Housing And Horrendous Living Conditions





Photos © John Brown All Rights Reserved

"Aw kun" (thank you), said Pgo, 14, as a friend from Australia delivered a large sheet of blue plastic to her shack dwelling family in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. "No problem," replied the woman, an anthropologist who has been studying women's health issues in Cambodia for 15 years. "I hope it helps keep you dry during the rainy season," the woman added.

While many of America's urban dwellers may be experiencing the aftermath of the "mortgage meltdown", in Cambodia, life is a bit different. Undisturbed by the need to make mortgage payments each month, many Cambodians have other concerns to deal with. Seemingly invisible to visitors, locals and institutions known by acronyms, they are people who've slipped through the cracks of urban Cambodian society. Living on side streets and in alleyways, pushed against buildings or relocated to the outskirts of towns, they strive to live normal mortgage free lives while enduring horrendous living conditions.

Ironically, some of these people may legally own property somewhere. When Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge regime came to power in 1975, his doctrine mandated removal of citizens from most cities, forcing them to flee en mass to the countryside. Since hundreds of thousands of these people later died, they never returned to the cities to reoccupy their homes. Neither did thousands of their surviving relatives who sought refuge in other countries. As cities were reoccupied after the Khmer Rouge fell, various individuals and factions took over many of these abandoned dwellings and still occupy them. Poorly kept records or their outright destruction makes establishing legal title one of the most lingering and complex issues facing the reconstruction of Cambodia today.

The People's Predicament

Inflation affects poor urban dwellers in Cambodia perhaps more than any other segment of society. The landless among them are without facility to grow their own food. As prices rise, they're forced to pay the going rate for items they consume. Many hold low paying jobs, scavenge for recyclable material or prepare goods for markets, but these activities don't provide enough income for savings. With homeownership starting at roughly $400 USD for a basic wooden house in many cities, poor urban dwellers can't afford their own homes.

While some families squat in public areas, thereby avoiding rent, others are relegated to renter status, paying up to $20 USD per month to secure space on garbage strewn streets. Whatever the case, after locating a little legroom for themselves, they must fashion some sort of shelter, usually constructed with thin plywood, plastic, canvass, paint cans and blankets. A neighborhood entrepreneur may make water available for 500-1000 riels per bucket, (1 USD = 4000 riels) and some shack dwellers "jury rig" makeshift electricity supplies. Just as people in most places, they have daily routines and their days typically begin with children awakening to search for suitable areas to defecate while mothers cook rice.

Rearranging Life

Other groups of people who are living life on the edge may hold legal and verifiable title to land they formerly occupied, but several large domestic and foreign corporations have managed to "purchase" or lease their land with the aid of the Cambodian government. This development has led to the forced relocation of thousands of Cambodian citizens, and many times the relocation packages are of the "take it or leave it" variety.

If compensation is offered at all, many people are transferred far from the city center. Lacking adequate transportation, those who formerly lived close to markets in order to sell their wares now face figuring out how to survive living beyond the reach of economic activity. Some of these forced evictions have been subject to widespread news coverage due to the numbers affected and sums of money involved, but dozens of others have received scant attention.

Two of the better known cases involve thousands of people in Phnom Penh. One reading a glossy Cambodian magazine may see a colorful full-page ad touting future development projects on tap at 7NG Company. While the page's architectural renditions depict glitzy high-rise office buildings and residential development, they fail to show the ultimate disposition of the people that were forced to make way for modernization.

One of 7NG Company's projects involves Dey Krahorm village in Phnom Penh. Residents endured several tactics designed to make them leave including construction workers equipped with sharpened crowbars and hatchets, electricity shut off and roadblocks that prevented people from delivering goods to market. On January 24, 2009, 7NG Company violently evicted citizens from their homes, and those who didn't accept the monetary compensation offered by 7NG before the eviction won't receive any cash now.

According to licadho.org, a Cambodian Human Rights NGO, Dey Krahorm village residents have been subjected to "a three-year campaign of harassment and intimidation of the community to coerce them to surrender their land to 7NG in return for new apartments on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, 20km away, or cash payments of far below the market value of the land."

Another circumstance involves a 900 million USD ninety-nine year lease awarded to the Shukaku Company for development rights to Phnom Penh's Boeung Kak Lake area. On February 6, 2007 Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chuktema signed away 133 ha of the Boeung Kak Lake area on a ninety-nine year renewable lease to this previously obscure firm whose director is Pheapimex's (Cambodia's largest landowner) Yeay Phu’s husband, Cambodian People’s Party CPP senator Lao Meng Khin.

The Housing Rights Task Force (HRTF), a coalition of local and international NGOs, and the Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR), report that the site is home to at least 4,252 families. According to the NGOs, none of these families were consulted about the deal and even though thousands of people will be forced to move, the lake is being filled with sand and cement.

Some moves barely ripple the waters. In Kampong Cham, where Cambodian President Hun Sen's brother Hun Neng serves as Provincial Governor, 39 families were relocated 9km from their Mekong River shoreline community to an isolated area near the city's outskirts two years ago by a local developer. Mention of the developer's name to residents might evoke the response, "Oh, the tycoon." The Khmer millionaire, owner of two large hotels located in the Cambodian tourist town of Siem Reap, offered to relocate the 250 residents to make way for a 200 plus room hotel.

The relocation package included small plots of land for each family unit, a community water well, plastic sheeting for home construction, and 50 kilograms of rice along with $100 USD per family. Although the mogul delivered on most of his promises, at this writing, the 39 families are collectively awaiting $3900 USD according to the village manager. Others are less fortunate, arriving at their new locations after months of bullying and persecution to find they are without electricity, water, plastic, access to schools or much of anything else.

Corporate Responsibility

Some of the transfer package recipients inevitably leave their small isolated plots behind to search for other accommodations, finally settling in areas near markets. Unfortunately, markets generate tons of trash each day and the refuse has to go somewhere. In Phnom Penh, in many cases, the flotsam eventually finds a home in a dumpster maintained by Cintri Garbage Company.

When the bins are empty they make handy urinals but once full, people dump garbage on the street. Confounding as it may seem, some of these trash receptacles are placed just feet from shack dwellers abodes. Accordingly, they suffer with the health hazards that accompany massive quantities of rotting food, including rodent infestation.

It all makes for unhygienic conditions, since many of the people earn their sustenance preparing food for market by beheading frogs or slicing fresh fish on the very streets the garbage is dumped. People jumping over discarded plastic food bags is a common sight, but some of this waste material is eventually washed away during downpours, clogging storm drains and leading to flooded streets and sidewalks.

You Can't Fight City Hall

Upiasia.com guest commentator Sourn Serey Raha, Chief of Mission of the Action Committee for Justice and Equity for Cambodians Overseas, based in Rhode Island USA stated, "Hun Sen's government has often been accused of corruption, human rights abuses, curtailing people's rights to peaceful protests and forcibly evicting poor citizens off their land so that it can be used for commercial development." The government has dismissed these allegations but being a government worker who looks out for the little person isn't easy in Cambodia.

Mr. Touch (not his real name) was a government employee in Phnom Penh. A photograph of Mr. Touch standing next to one of Cambodian President Hun Sen's brothers adorned a wall in his now shuttered restaurant. Apparently, Mr. Touch didn't think destroying Boeung Kak Lake was such a good idea and he wondered where the people living around the lake would go next. After voicing these concerns to people involved in government policymaking, he was quickly shown the door.

Today, beset with health problems, he's looking for a place to call home sweet home himself.


John Brown Photojournalist On LIGHTSTALKERS
My Mondo Library Photography
My Photoshelter Photography Archive Homepage
GAIA Photography and Photojournalism

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Our World


The Global Reporting Initiative’s (GRI) vision is that reporting on economic, environmental, and social performance by all organizations becomes as routine and comparable as financial reporting. GRI accomplishes this vision by developing, continually improving, and building capacity around the use of its Sustainability Reporting Framework. The GRI Guidelines are the most common framework used in the world for reporting. More than 1000 organizations from 60 countries use the Guidelines to produce their sustainability reports.

The City of Amsterdam hosted the Amsterdam Global Conference on Sustainability and Transparency with GRI May 7-9, 2008. In conjunction with the conference a photo exhibition on the themes of Sustainability and Transparency through the eyes of some photographers was presented at The Melkweg Galerie to stimulate discussions on important themes.

The photographers included Spain's Pep Bonet, the 2005 winner of the Eugene Smith Humanistic Grant, (he is represented by Noor) America's Chris Jordan and Danfung Dennis, Germany's Katherina Mouratidi, The Netherland's Jan-Joseph Stok and Vincenzo D'Alto of Canada. I was proud to be a part of this thought provoking event.

Dam the Mighty Mekong


Southeast Asia's Mekong River Basin is a splendid region blessed with natural beauty, unique cultures and a centuries old river-based economy. Sixty million people call the basin their home while reaping life's daily bread. Change is afoot along the 4800-kilometer Mekong River however, as nearly 100 hydroelectric dam construction projects are currently being planned. While some projects thus far exist only on the drawing board, others are moving headlong towards the day the first sack of concrete arrives.

According to Meenakshi Raman, Chair, Friends of the Earth International, "Adaptation efforts should benefit the poor and protect ecosystems, livelihoods and human security. More emphasis and priority should be given to energy efficiency and renewable energy, especially solar and wind power."

Overall, the Mekong is a habitat for 1,300 types of fish, including a nearly extinct freshwater dolphin specie known as the Irrawaddy. The dolphin, whose numbers have dwindled to fewer than 170 in the Mekong and less than 1000 worldwide, inhabits small sections of southern Laos and the central Cambodian province of Kratie, site of the proposed Sambor dam on the mainstream.

Is dam construction the best way to provide the lower Mekong River Basin with sorely needed energy? Not according to Guy Lanza, Director of the Environmental Science Program at the University of Massachusetts (USA). In an email interview that recently appeared in The Cambodia Daily, Lanza, an expert who has studied the region for nearly 40 years remarked, "The most pressing issues related to hydroelectric dam projects include ecological damage and human suffering. Planners tend to view water in terms of quantity rather than quality."

Virtually all funding for dam construction will come from China through state-owned financial institutions such as the Chinese Export-Import Bank. There is scant information regarding the financial details for these projects available to the public however, and interestingly, China has never joined the MRC. Stakeholder Burma (Myanmar) ranked last in Transparency International's 2007 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) out of 179 countries listed while Cambodia, (162) and Laos (168) didn't fare much better.

Whether government policymakers provide full disclosure to the public remains to be seen, but whatever the case, today's way of life along the Mekong River is certain to change.

Sunday, October 12, 2008



Did you know that in third world countries, 2% of all residents sustain themselves by collecting recyclable material?

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

A Show At The Gallery


Here is a little exhibit that took place in Amsterdam awhile back. That Pep Bonet man....well he is a Eugene Smith award winner....it's like winning the ""Oscar" in the category of documentary humanistic photography I suppose. Chris Jordan.....you may not know his name, but you have probably seen his photos.