Winners of World Report Award 2022 photography prize - in pictures
Brazilian photographer Felipe Fittipaldi won in the Master category of the Festival of Ethical Photography's World Report Award. Photo: Felipe Fittipaldi
Through his series 'Eustasy', Felipe Fittipaldi documents the relationship between community and the environment in Atafona, Brazil. Photo: Felipe Fittipaldi
Atafona, north of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, is where some of the most significant examples of coastal erosion can be found. Photo: Felipe Fittipaldi
Exacerbated by climate change, the sea has already submerged more than 500 houses, turning the once idyllic coastline into an underwater graveyard of wrecked structures. Photo: Felipe Fittipaldi
Short Story Award Winner Isabella Franceschini was recognised for her series 'Becoming a Citizen'. Photo: Isabella Franceschini
Through her series, Franceschini follows the life of Michelle Lamieri, who, at only 15, is one of the youngest mayors in Italy. Photo: Isabella Franceschini
Michelle photographed by Short Story winner Isabella Franceschini. Photo: Isabella Franceschini
More than 20 public exhibitions will be held at the festival, with the World Report Award as one the main highlights. Photo: Isabella Franceschini
Julia Gunther has won a special mention in the Single Shot category for this photo. Photo: Julia Gunther
Spotlight winner Line Ornes Sondergaard's series is called 'The Split - A Brexit Love Story'. Photo: Line Ornes Sondergaard
In the series, Sondergaard follows the relationship between a Lithuanian woman and an English man before and after the referendum. Photo: Line Ornes Sondergaard
Through his project, Sondergaard attempts to understand the effects on people of the UK's decision to leave the European Union. Photo: Line Ornes Sondergaard
'This is a story about opening borders and closing minds, about class and identity, solidarity and distrust,' the Festival of Ethical Photography says. Photo: Line Ornes Sondergaard
The Student category is won by Valentin Goppel, for his project 'Between the Years', about the impact of lockdown during the pandemic on the student generation in Germany. Photo: Valentin Goppel
Through his project, Goppel documents his friends and acquaintances during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, starkly showcasing a world in flux. Photo: Valentin Goppel
Student Award Winner Valentin Goppel's photo for his project 'Between the Years', about the impact of lockdown during the pandemic on his student generation in Germany. Photo: Valentin Goppel
Students in a class in Goppel's series 'Between the Years'. Photo: Valentin Goppel
'The Lives of Others', a separate exhibition at the Festival of Ethical Photography, will feature works by six others, including Canadian photographer Barbara Davidson. Photo: Barbara Davidson
Davidson's series, 'Valeries and Henry: Unhoused but Unbroken', focuses on two of Los Angeles’s 65,000 homeless people, from their marriage to being removed from the park in which they lived. Photo: Barbara Davidson
Davidson's project documents the couple from their new life in a van to their return to street life. Photo: Barbara Davidson
Italian photographer Erika Pezzoli's series 'Artemis' follows a female hunter, Carola. Photo: Erika Pezzoli
Pezzoli's subject Carola is part of the 2 per cent of female hunters in Valle d 'Aosta, an autonomous region in Italy. Photo: Erika Pezzoli
A photo by Erika Pezzoli in her series 'Artemis'. Photo: Erika Pezzoli
Russian photographer Misha Maslennikov documents life in the Russian steppes or grassland in her series 'The Don Steppe'. Photo: Misha Maslennikov
Steppes are vast semi-arid grasslands. Photo: Misha Maslennikov
A photo by Misha Maslennikov in her series 'The Don Steppe'. Photo: Misha Maslennikov
Through his series 'Donna', French photographer Thomas Morel-Fort captures the lives of undocumented Filipino workers in Paris and Cote d'Azur. Photo: Thomas Morel-Fort
Living a life of sacrifice, many of Thomas Morel-Fort's subjects work in wealthy homes in France. Photo: Thomas Morel-Fort
A photo by Thomas Morel-Fort in his series 'Donna'. Photo: Thomas Morel-Fort
In his series 'In The World But Not Of It', Tim Smith documents the lives of Hutterites whose 16th-century culture is preserved through self-sufficiency. Photo: Tim Smith
Hutterites are Anabaptists, who follow a form of radical Christian belief system, and isolate themselves from the larger society. Photo: Tim Smith
Today, most of the Hutterites can be found in Canada and northern US. Photo: Tim Smith
Chinese photographer Xiangyu Long documents the life of a Tibetan yak herder who became an overnight celebrity through TikTok, in 'TikTok in Kham'. Photo: Xiangyu Long
A shot from Xiangyu Long's 'TikTok in Kham'. Photo: Xiangyu Long