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Kate Brooks
American photojournalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kate Brooks (born 1977) is an American photojournalist who has covered the Middle East, Afghanistan, and Pakistan since September 11, 2001.
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Biography
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At age 20, while studying Russian and photography, Kate became actively involved in the plight of Russian orphans, starting a non-profit aid group to help the children at an institution outside of Moscow, while documenting their lives. The resulting photographs[2] were published in Human Rights Watch's (HRW) report entitled "Abandoned by the State: Cruelty and Neglect in Russian Orphanages"[3] and syndicated worldwide through Saba Press Photos. The campaign for orphans' rights galvanized global interest and raised funds to help orphaned children. She has worked as a freelance photojournalist ever since.[4]
Immediately after the September 11 attacks, Brooks was ordered to move to Pakistan to photograph the impact of U.S. foreign policy on the region and life in post-Taliban Afghanistan. In 2003, she covered the American invasion of Iraq and the beginning of the insurgency for Time Magazine.[5]
Since then, Brooks has continued to work across the region, photographing news and the impact of conflict on civilian populations, notably the Cedar Revolution, Pakistan earthquake,[6] 2006 Lebanon war,[7] Iraqi refugee exodus, clashes in Nahr al-Bared,[8] Afghan elections,[9] aftermath of Operation Cast Lead in Gaza,[10] Swat Valley refugee crisis and protests in Tahrir Square.
Brooks has photographed military and political leaders such as former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf for Time magazine,[11] President Asif Ali Zardari for The New York Times Magazine, Afghan President Hamid Karzai for GQ[12] and Time,[13] General Stanley McChrystal for The Atlantic cover story by Robert Kaplan, King Abdullah II and Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri.
Her photographs have also appeared in The New Yorker,[14] Smithsonian, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, Vanity Fair Italy, and The Wall Street Journal[15]
Brooks was a Knight-Wallace Fellow in Journalism in 2012–2013.[16]
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Books
Documentary films
- The Last Animals (2017)[19] directed by Brooks was about man-caused mass animal extinction. The documentary premiered at Tribeca Film Festival[20] where Brooks was awarded a Disruptor Award.[21] For two years she campaigned[22] for ivory and rhino horn bans while the film travelled the film festival circuit around the world. In 2018, The Last Animals won the Impact Award[23] at Wildscreen[24] in competition with Blue Planet II. In 2019 the film was broadcast globally by National Geographic,[25] streamed on Hulu in the U.S and Netflix overseas.
- The Boxing Girls of Kabul (2011)[26] directed by Ariel Nassar was about a group of young Afghan women dream of representing their country as boxers at the 2012 Olympics, embarking on a journey of both personal and political transformation. The film premiered at the International Documentary Film Awards[27] in 2011, won a Canadian Screen Award and Inspirit Foundation Pluralism Prize. Brooks worked on the documentary as a contributing cinematographer and photographer.
- Kate Brooks was an Executive Producer on the documentary Tigre Gente (2021)[28] that premiered at Tribeca Film Festival[29] and broadcast on National Geographic[30] in Latin America.
Awards
- Photo District News 30 Under 30 2002[31]
- TIME Pictures of the Year 2002[32]
- TIME Picture of the Year 2005[33]
- Picture of the Year International 2007[34]
- World Press Photo Masterclass 2007[35]
- International Photography Awards 2008[36]
- Disruptor Award 2017[21]
- Impact Award Wildscreen 2018[23]
- Picture of the Year International 2020[37]
References
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