JOURNEYS TO SCHOOL
An unprecedented photo report dedicated to children around the world
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES
-
Alaska, United States
Situated in Alaska, at the extreme north of the American continent, on the tip of a 12-kilometre (8-mile) island, at the edge of the Chukchi Sea, the village of Kivalina is threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. The children of the Native American Iñupiat community continue to go to school despite the harsh Arctic winter and the challenges linked to global warming.
Photographer: Loren HOLMES