Focus:Photographer, Photojournalist, Journalist, Writer, Reporter, Fine Art, Environment, Architecture, Science, History, Documentary, News, Photography, Journalist Investigative, Civil Rights and Social Inequality, Humanitarian, Columnist, Assignments, Teacher, Educator, Conservationist, Human Rights, Artist, Multimedia Journalist, Editing, Storyteller, Visual Artist, Climate, News Reporter, Print Journalism, Environmental Stories, Still Photographer, Landscape, Social Justice, Nature, Reportage, Visual Journalist, Visual Storyteller, Visual Storytelling
Covering:USA & Canada
Skills:Research, Digital Printing, Audio Recording, Film Scanning, Adobe InDesign, Photo Editing, Black & White Printing, Color Printing, Photojournalism, Film Processing, Film Photography, News Writing, Adobe Creative Suite
Clients:
ZUMA Press, Inc.,
Red Canary Magazine,
Vox,
The Guardian,
Public Radio Exchange
The idea that all politics are left at the water's edge when facing substantial external threats seems naive in today's polarized political atmosphere. Even the water's edge itself is becoming a slippery boundary to grasp as global warming raises sea levels and the effects of those rising levels are being felt around the world. We have long gone to the coasts to find rest, relaxation, and even ourselves. Coastal ecosystems provide 77% of global ecosystem-services value. About 40% of our human population lives within coastal limits; a great deal of them in twenty-one, of the earth's thirty-three, mega-cities which are found on the coast.