Today’s daily Photojournalism Links collection highlights Daniel Berehulak’s exceptional coverage of the Ebola outbreak in Liberia. The photographer has spent several weeks in the country on assignment for the New York Times and this latest set of images documents the work of burial teams collecting bodies around the capital, Monrovia. The picture, which shows a young man having to witness his father’s corpse being taken away, is particularly harrowing. It ran on the front page of the paper yesterday.
Massimo Berruti: The Undisclosed (Foreign Policy) Portraits of the victims of America’s drone war in Pakistan.
Chris McGrath: Japan’s Soldier High School (Time.com) Fascinating look inside the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force’s High Technical School in Yokosuka, by the Tokyo-based Getty Images photographer.
Jake Price: Fukushima, Three Years Later (The New Yorker Photo Booth) Photographs of a landscape affected by the nuclear meltdown, as well as the earthquake and tsunami that caused it.
Kate Brooks: Africa’s Last Elephants (Wired Raw File) Aerial photographs of the endangered animals at Zakouma National Park in southern Chad.
Anastasia Taylor-Lind: The Most Frightening Thing About War (National Geographic PROOF blog) Powerful words on the experience of covering the war in Easter Ukraine.
Photography Center Leaving Midtown for the Bowery (The New York Times) The International Center of Photography’s exhibition space is moving next year. The current show, Sebastião Salgado’s Genesis, will be the last at its current location in Midtown Manhattan.
Photojournalism Links is a compilation of the most interesting photojournalism found on the web, curated by Mikko Takkunen, Associate Photo Editor at TIME. Follow him on Twitter @photojournalism.
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