Suzanne Lee Photographer

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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
    suzanne lee 16
  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Photo of Suzanne Lee, a Malaysian documentary photographer based in India. Photo by Asim Rafiqui.
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Portrait of Suzanne Lee, a documentary photographer born in Malaysia, based in India. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Villagers buy vegetables from a minivan in a remote village where Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, is making documentaries on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, shoots an overview of a remote village to fit into her documentaries on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Crows play in the wind above a river with low water levels in Surendranagar a small town area where Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, makes documentaries on topics of water and other socio-environmental issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • A traditional Dalit woman walks past as Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • (Clockwise from left) Niru, 24, and her sisters, Daksha 15, Kailash, 19, Mukta, 22, and Nayna 27 carrying her son Dev 3, and their father Jethabhai Rathod, 60 pose for a family Portrait at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to Jethabhai, a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, helps her sisters to prepare lunch as her sister Nayna (left), 27, combs her hair at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, looks through her video footage on her camera while her sister Mukta (center), 22,  attends to a tailoring customer at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod's sister Mukta (center), 22, attends to her tailoring customers at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod's sister Mukta (center), 22, prepares lunch for their large family at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (left), 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, looks through her video footage on her camera while her sister Kailash (left), 19, sews clothes for customers at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, looks at her two seamstress sisters Mukta, 22, and Kailash (center), 19, as she reads the newspaper at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, looks at her two seamstress sisters Mukta, 22, and Kailash (center), 19, as she reads the newspaper at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, shows some pictures to her sister Kailash (left), 19, who works at home as a seamstress in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, reads the newspaper with the TV running news channels in the background as her sister Daksha (left), 15, walks past at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with traditional women villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (center, in green), 24, sits for a group portrait with an upper caste family that discriminated against her when she first met them but now respect her for the social change she has brought about in their remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. The last time Niru had come to their home, she was discriminated against and served tea in a saucer meant for lower castes. Now, after seeing the effects of her video activism, the family no longer discriminates against her. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • An upper caste family listens as Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with their family members in their home on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. The last time Niru had come to their home, she was discriminated against and served tea in a saucer meant for lower castes. Now, after seeing the effects of her video activism, the family no longer discriminates against her. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • An upper caste family listens as Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with their family members in their home on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. The last time Niru had come to their home, she was discriminated against and served tea in a saucer meant for lower castes. Now, after seeing the effects of her video activism, the family no longer discriminates against her. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, studies law while her sisters Mukta (top), 22, and Kailash, 19, sew clothes for customers at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, studies law while her sisters Mukta (top), 22, and Kailash, 19, sew clothes for customers at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, studies law while her sister Mukta (left), 22, sews clothes for customers at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, helps her sisters to prepare lunch as her sister Nayna (left), 27, combs her hair at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, helps her sisters with household chores at their home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • An upper caste woman (left) serves tea to a Dalit midwife in a saucer meant for people of the Dalit caste, in a house where Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, is doing an interview on topics of caste discrimination in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. The last time Niru had come to their home, she was discriminated against and served tea in a saucer meant for lower castes. Now, after seeing the effects of her video activism, the family no longer discriminates against her. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • An upper caste family listens as Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with their family members in their home on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. The last time Niru had come to their home, she was discriminated against and served tea in a saucer meant for lower castes. Now, after seeing the effects of her video activism, the family no longer discriminates against her. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, does spot interviews with Panchayat men (village leaders) on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (left), 24, does spot interviews with villagers on topics of caste discrimination and water quality issues in a remote village in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Rajah Swaraj Banerjee tastes each batch of tea produced in Makaibari. Tea tasting is strikingly similar to what one would imagine of a teetotaler's wine tasting. Rajah and his experts taste every batch of tea as a quality control measure. Just by tasting the finished tea, which must be correctly brewed, connoisseurs can tell exactly where the error occurred in the processing stages of a faulty tea.<br />
Flavors of different types of tea are influenced by time and style of picking as well as method of processing.
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  • Rawan stands behind her elder sister Reem as they pose for a photograph in Hong Kong on February 25th, 2019. Reem, aged 20, and Rawan (aged 18) (not their real names) fled from their abusive family and Saudi Arabia's oppressive conditions while on holiday in Sri Lanka and were intercepted in Hong Kong on their way to Australia to seek asylum. <br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for TIME
    20190225-TIME-SaudiSisters-0191.jpg
  • Rawan (left) and her elder sister Reem stand for a photograph in a room in Hong Kong on February 25th, 2019. Reem, aged 20, and Rawan (aged 18) (not their real names) fled from their abusive family and Saudi Arabia's oppressive conditions while on holiday in Sri Lanka and were intercepted in Hong Kong on their way to Australia to seek asylum. <br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for TIME
    20190225-TIME-SaudiSisters-0167.jpg
  • Rawan (foreground) listens as her lawyer Michael Vidler, talks while sitting in a room in Hong Kong on February 25th, 2019. Reem, aged 20, and Rawan (aged 18) (not their real names) fled from their abusive family and Saudi Arabia's oppressive conditions while on holiday in Sri Lanka and were intercepted in Hong Kong on their way to Australia to seek asylum. <br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for TIME
    20190225-TIME-SaudiSisters-0143.jpg
  • Hong Kong's skyline of skyscrapers from The Peak, Hong Kong on June 30th, 2019.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS
    20190630-Macleans-HKProtest-0079.jpg
  • Hong Kong's skyline of skyscrapers from The Peak, Hong Kong on June 30th, 2019.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for MacLean's
    20190630-Macleans-HKProtest-0024.jpg
  • Protesters wear black and gather in the streets from Victoria Park to Central to protest against the extradition bill, and police use of force during a recent riot, and demand for Chief Executive Carrie Lam's resignation, besides other concerns, in Hong Kong on July 1st, 2019. Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS
    20190701-Panos-HK-Protests-0946.jpg
  • Protesters wear black and gather in the streets from Victoria Park to Central to protest against the extradition bill, and police use of force during a recent riot, and demand for Chief Executive Carrie Lam's resignation, besides other concerns, in Hong Kong on July 1st, 2019. Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS
    20190701-Panos-HK-Protests-0684.jpg
  • Protesters wear black and gather in the streets from Victoria Park to Central to protest against the extradition bill, and police use of force during a recent riot, and demand for Chief Executive Carrie Lam's resignation, besides other concerns, in Hong Kong on July 1st, 2019. Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS
    20190701-Panos-HK-Protests-0593.jpg
  • Protesters wear black and gather in the streets from Victoria Park to Central to protest against the extradition bill, and police use of force during a recent riot, and demand for Chief Executive Carrie Lam's resignation, besides other concerns, in Hong Kong on July 1st, 2019. Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS
    20190701-Panos-HK-Protests-0555.jpg
  • Protesters wear black and gather in the streets from Victoria Park to Central to protest against the extradition bill, and police use of force during a recent riot, and demand for Chief Executive Carrie Lam's resignation, besides other concerns, in Hong Kong on July 1st, 2019. Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS
    20190701-Panos-HK-Protests-0545.jpg
  • Tan Eow Chong stands for a portrait at Durian Kaki, Tan Eow Chong's roadside durian stall, in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on June 17th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190617-LAT-Durian-1726.jpg
  • A variety of durians (from left: Little Red, Musang King, D11) are seen on a table in Durian Kaki, Tan Eow Chong's roadside durian stall, in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on June 17th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190617-LAT-Durian-1660.jpg
  • Tan Eow Chong's workers clean harvested durians on a farm, in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on June 17th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190617-LAT-Durian-1431.jpg
  • Tan Eow Chong's workers harvest durians on a farm as his son, Tan Chee Keat (center) checks the quality of the harvest, in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on June 17th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190617-LAT-Durian-1358.jpg
  • Customers eat durian at a roadside stall during the Durian Festival in Georgetown, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on June 16th, 2019. The tropical fruit has become one of China's latest culinary fixations, sending the export demand and prices soaring, and becoming a point of attraction for tourists who come to Malaysia to try its famed varieties.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190616-LAT-Durian-1039.jpg
  • A worker opens a durian for customers at Durian Kaki, a roadside fruit stall owned by Tan Eow Chong and his family in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on Sunday, June 16th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190616-LAT-Durian-0687.jpg
  • A group of tourists from Hong Kong feast on a Musang King durian on their annual trip to Malaysia to eat durians at Durian Kaki, a roadside fruit stall owned by Tan Eow Chong and his family in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on Sunday, June 16th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190616-LAT-Durian-0601.jpg
  • A worker picks some durian fruits for customers at Durian Kaki, a roadside fruit stall owned by Tan Eow Chong and his family in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on Sunday, June 16th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190616-LAT-Durian-0325.jpg
  • Durian fruits are seen in baskets in Durian Kaki, a roadside fruit stall owned by Tan Eow Chong and his family in Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia on Sunday, June 16th, 2019. Tan Eow Chong is an award-winning durian farmer famed for his Musang King variety, and last year exported 1000 tons of the fruit to China from his family-run durian empire, expanding from an 80 acre farm to 1000 acres.  Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Los Angeles Times
    20190616-LAT-Durian-0305.jpg
  • Phobsuk 'Dang' Gasing, a domestic worker union leader and worker's rights activist in Hong Kong talks on the phone in her Thai Migrant Worker's Union (TWMU) office in Kowloon City, Hong Kong SAR on March 3rd, 2019. Dang is also the chairperson for the Federation of Asian Migrant Workers' Union (FADWU) and a member of the International Domestic Workers' Federation (IDWF). <br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Open Society Foundations
    SL_03MAR19_OSF_DANG-OFF_HK-0012.JPG
  • Phobsuk 'Dang' Gasing, a domestic worker union leader and worker's rights activist in Hong Kong talks on the phone in her Thai Migrant Worker's Union (TWMU) office in Kowloon City, Hong Kong SAR on March 3rd, 2019. Dang is also the chairperson for the Federation of Asian Migrant Workers' Union (FADWU) and a member of the International Domestic Workers' Federation (IDWF). <br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Open Society Foundations
    SL_03MAR19_OSF_DANG-OFF_HK-0011.JPG
  • Phobsuk 'Dang' Gasing, a domestic worker union leader and worker's rights activist in Hong Kong stands in her Thai Migrant Worker's Union (TWMU) office in Kowloon City, Hong Kong SAR on March 3rd, 2019. Dang is also the chairperson for the Federation of Asian Migrant Workers' Union (FADWU) and a member of the International Domestic Workers' Federation (IDWF). <br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS for Open Society Foundations
    SL_03MAR19_OSF_DANG-OFF_HK-0008.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, plays a leading role in organising an annual rally demanding better conditions for Hong Kong's migrant domestic workforce, as they march to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0080.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, plays a leading role in organising an annual rally demanding better conditions for Hong Kong's migrant domestic workforce, as they march to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0067.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, plays a leading role in organising an annual rally demanding better conditions for Hong Kong's migrant domestic workforce, as they march to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0065.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, plays a leading role in organising an annual rally demanding better conditions for Hong Kong's migrant domestic workforce, as they march to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0066.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, plays a leading role in organising an annual rally demanding better conditions for Hong Kong's migrant domestic workforce, as they march to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0039.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, plays a leading role in organising an annual rally demanding better conditions for Hong Kong's migrant domestic workforce, as they march to the Central Government Offices in Admiralty, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0034.JPG
  • Phobsuk "Dang" Gasing, a migrant domestic worker and migrant workers' rights activist, gives a talk at an event on how migrant domestic workers and their employers get along with each other in Wan Chai, Hong Kong SAR on December 16, 2018. Gasing has been a domestic worker for 27 years and is also an executive committee member of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and chairperson of the Hong Kong Federation of Asian Domestic Workers Unions (FADWU) and Thai Migrant Workers Union (TMWU).<br />
Photo by Suzanne Lee/PANOS Pictures for Open Society Foundation
    20181216-OSF-HKworkers-0008.JPG
  • Chanda Devi, 30, the Director of a Producer Company with over 1900 members, poses for a portrait outside the company building in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-1023.jpg
  • A producer group farmer holds a handful of vegetables at the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0902.jpg
  • Collection centre owner Ganesh Kumar Singh (in white shirt), 30, weighs and sorts out vegetables that other producer group farmers bring in to be sold to his collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Ganesh and his wife, Asha Devi, a producer group member, rent out a part of their house to be used as a collection centre for Producer Group farmers. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0829.jpg
  • Collection centre workers grade vegetables and pack them for sale in the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0820.jpg
  • Vegetable farmer Geeta Devi (in orange), 45, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, sells her harvested cauliflower vegetables at the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0506.jpg
  • Vegetable farmer Geeta Devi (in orange), 45, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, walks to the collection centre with her harvested cauliflower vegetables in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0477.jpg
  • Women vegetable farmers, all members of a Farmer's Producer Group, harvest cauliflower vegetables in their fields in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0400.jpg
  • Vegetable farmer Sawan Kumari, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, tends to her brinjal (eggplant) plants in her farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0362.jpg
  • Vegetable farmer Kajal Devi, 20, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, tends to her chilli plants in her farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0208.jpg
  • Women vegetable farmers have a discussion during a Producer Group meeting in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0107.jpg
  • Technoserve's Manager of Market Linkage, Rajiv Shinde, interacts with vegetable farmers during a Producer Group meeting in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0013.jpg
  • Technoserve's Assistant Project Manager, Piyush Tiwari, discusses plant diseases with guar farmer Bhanwarlal Sharma, 60, and his son, Arjun Sharma, 28, in their agriculture field in Bamanwali village, Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-2367.jpg
  • Technoserve's Assistant Project Manager, Piyush Tiwari, discusses plant diseases with guar farmer Bhanwarlal Sharma, 60, and his son, Arjun Sharma, 28, in their agriculture field in Bamanwali village, Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-2339.jpg
  • Guar farmer Bhanwarlal Sharma, 60, poses for a portrait in his agriculture field in Bamanwali village, Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-2253.jpg
  • Traders bid for guar harvests from piles that farmers bring in to be auctioned off in Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-2208.jpg
  • Traders bid for guar harvests from piles as farmers bring in their harvests to be auctioned off in Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-2158.jpg
  • Traders bid for guar harvests from piles that farmers bring in to be auctioned off in Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-2126.jpg
  • Piyush Tiwari, Assistant Project Manager at Technoserve, provides field training to a group of guar farmers in the Technoserve Guar Demo Plot in Kheeyara village, Bikaner, Rajasthan, India on October 24th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with farmers in Bikaner, providing technical support and training, causing increased yield from implementation of good agricultural practices as well as a switch to using better grains better suited to the given climate. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161024-TNS-Guar-1986.jpg
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