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  • Fontanabuona valley. Slate factory owned by Angela and Donatella Mangini. Spacchino, the traditional specialised worker able to cut slate plates less thick than those made by machines.
    em7151231.jpg
  • Fontanabuona valley. Slate factory owned by Angela and Donatella Mangini. Spacchino, the traditional specialised worker able to cut slate plates less thick than those made by machines.
    em7151286.jpg
  • Fontanabuona valley. Slate factory owned by Angela and Donatella Mangini. Spacchino, the traditional specialised worker able to cut slate plates less thick than those made by machines.
    em7151190.jpg
  • Riviera Maya: Mayan workers building a new resort.
    em0211122.jpg
  • Giancarlo Pajetta, historical leader of the Italian Communist Party with Fiat workers near the Fiat Mirafiori factory.
    em7111081.jpg
  • Settimo Torinese, 1980s. primary school for unemployed workers
    em7237030.jpg
  • Workers on strike occupy the Turin's railway main station.
    em7111082.jpg
  • Giancarlo Pajetta, historical leader of the Italian Communist Party with Fiat workers near the Fiat Mirafiori factory.
    em7111081.jpg
  • Marina Dubai, the strip of new hotels and the most recent expansion of the city. Immigrant workers employed in the building industry.
    em2800866-1.jpg
  • Les Baux. Today the quarry at Sarragan  is the only working mine in operation. It uses modern day equipment to replace the once 300 quarry workers who worked in the mines of les Baux during the great period of manual<br />
mining. The mining of the stone quarries at Les Baux dates back to the antiquity period. This soft stone was later mined by the Romans in open-pit quarries. Due to the facility with which the stone can be worked and sculpted it was used for heavy brickwork but also for decorative architectural elements in the nearby town of Arles.
    em7302239.jpg
  • First of May parade on Karl Marx allee in East Berlin, capital of DDR (German Democratic Republic. Workers armed volunteers.
    em7704572.jpg
  • First of May parade on Karl Marx allee in East Berlin, capital of DDR (German Democratic Republic. Workers armed volunteers.
    em7700410.jpg
  • Locharron, tartan traditional factory. The workers hand-checking the tartan.
    em0763015.jpg
  • Panamà Canal workers helping a container ship at Gatùn Locks.
    em0510626.jpg
  • 1976. Small factory.
    em7237053.jpg
  • 1970s. Settimo Torinese, steelworks.
    em7237050.jpg
  • Shopping Centre.
    em0510070.jpg
  • The historical dockyards. The dry docks were built by the British to meet the demands of shipping traffic caused by the building of the Suez Canal in 1869. uring World War II, the Dockyard was one of the main targets of air attacks over Malta, and Senglea, overlooking the dockyard, suffered terribly in that ordeal.
    em8401101.jpg
  • The historical dockyards. The dry docks were built by the British to meet the demands of shipping traffic caused by the building of the Suez Canal in 1869. uring World War II, the Dockyard was one of the main targets of air attacks over Malta, and Senglea, overlooking the dockyard, suffered terribly in that ordeal.
    em8401098.jpg
  • Fontanabuona valley. Slate factory owned by Angela and Donatella Mangini. Slate plates cut by machines drived by infrared ligh. The slate need to be wet when worked.
    em7151347.jpg
  • Fontanabuona valley. Slate factory owned by Angela and Donatella Mangini. Slate plates cut by machines drived by infrared ligh. The slate need to be wet when worked.
    em7151345.jpg
  • Geoffrey Taylor traditional shop on the Royal Mile. Mungo Angus Maclean is a expert tartan cutter.
    em0763035.jpg
  • Locharron, tartan traditional factory.
    em0763031.jpg
  • Assembly line at Ceat tyres factory near Turin.
    em7111078.jpg
  • Modena. Panini factory. Panini is a leading card company headquartered in Modena, named after the Panini brothers who founded it in 1961.The company produces books, comics, magazines, stickers, trading cards and other items worldwide.
    em7139112.jpg
  • Modena. Panini factory. Panini is a leading card company headquartered in Modena, named after the Panini brothers who founded it in 1961.The company produces books, comics, magazines, stickers, trading cards and other items worldwide.
    em7139102.jpg
  • fish market.
    em0510064.jpg
  • Honningsvag, the "Cathedral", a maintenance workshop for everything on the island, from the shiping boats to the refrigerators.
    em8500429.jpg
  • Assembly line at Ceat tyres factory near Turin.
    em7111078.jpg
  • Hebrides Islands, Skye island. Minginish Peninsula, Talisker Distillery, the only one of Skye.
    em0761021.jpg
  • Gatùn Locks. The amount of concrete poured to construct Gatùn locks - 1.820.000 cubic meters - was record-setting.
    em0510618.jpg
  • Miraflores Locks: so significants is the Canal that ships the over world are build to fithin the dimensions of its locks, 305m long and 33.5 wide.
    em0510582.jpg
  • Control Rooms of Miraflores Locks are protected inside deep tunnels. Every lock weighs 720 tons.
    em0510580.jpg
  • Control Rooms of Miraflores Locks are protected inside deep tunnels. Every lock weighs 720 tons.
    em0510579.jpg
  • Miraflores Locks, where the ships are lowered to the Pacific level. Electric locomotives (mulas mecanicas) works 24 hours.
    em0510576.jpg
  • one of the workshops where are painted Diablos Rojos, Red Devils, the multi-colored bus that dominates Panamà City streets. One of most unique aspects of Panamà City, a true cultural experience, is a fleet of buses traditionally called diablos rojos, red devils, school buses creatively transformed into works of art by their owners in a folkloric style. Many buses have paintings of religious icons, pop culture heroes, actresses, sport stars, politicians. The drivers choose their own routes and on the front of the bus is usually painted the destination. Music at high volume, poor ventilation and lack of security transform the buses in a uncomfortable transport system. In 2003 the red devils (two percent of all vehicles) caused 14 percent of traffic accidents. Panamà’s governement is trying the put end to the legend of Diablos Rojos but Panamà expresses its popular culture through the bus painting, in the way murals do for other cities, so this expression of popular art could end in few years.
    em0510298.jpg
  • Honningsvag, at the Nordvagen A/S fishing factory in the Norvagen village some days at least 60 fishing boats dock with fish of the Barents Sea. The factory works mainly with dried and salted cod (klippfisk in Norwegian, bacalhau in Portuguese), cod which has been preserved by drying after salting.
    em8500409.jpg
  • one of the workshops where are painted Diablos Rojos, Red Devils, the multi-colored bus that dominates Panamà City streets.
    em0510295.jpg
  • Locharron, tartan traditional factory.
    em0763029.jpg
  • Modena. Panini factory. Panini is a leading card company headquartered in Modena, named after the Panini brothers who founded it in 1961.The company produces books, comics, magazines, stickers, trading cards and other items worldwide.
    em7139120.jpg
  • Modena. Panini factory. Panini is a leading card company headquartered in Modena, named after the Panini brothers who founded it in 1961.The company produces books, comics, magazines, stickers, trading cards and other items worldwide.
    em7139113.jpg
  • Modena. Panini factory. Panini is a leading card company headquartered in Modena, named after the Panini brothers who founded it in 1961.The company produces books, comics, magazines, stickers, trading cards and other items worldwide.
    em7139111.jpg
  • Modena. Panini factory. Panini is a leading card company headquartered in Modena, named after the Panini brothers who founded it in 1961.The company produces books, comics, magazines, stickers, trading cards and other items worldwide.
    em7139104.jpg
  • Locharron, tartan traditional factory.
    em0763007.jpg
  • Miraflores Locks: so significants is the Canal that ships the over world are build to fithin the dimensions of its locks, 305m long and 33.5 wide.
    em0510649.jpg
  • Gatùn Locks. The amount of concrete poured to construct Gatùn locks – 1.820.000 cubic meters – was record-setting.
    em0510617.jpg
  • Miraflores Locks: so significants is the Canal that ships the over world are build to fithin the dimensions of its locks, 305m long and 33.5 wide.
    em0510584.jpg
  • The historical dockyards. The dry docks were built by the British to meet the demands of shipping traffic caused by the building of the Suez Canal in 1869. uring World War II, the Dockyard was one of the main targets of air attacks over Malta, and Senglea, overlooking the dockyard, suffered terribly in that ordeal.
    em8401112.jpg
  • Beirut Maronite worker in a textile factory. Coptics, Greek Orthodox, Syrians, only few components of the fragmented galaxy of the ?living stones? as often are defined the oriental christian churches, are the protagonists of a frequently forgotten world that currently menaces to die in the same places in which Christianity born. Rituals and stories similar to legends lost in time survive intact and in these places regain the strenght of a living reality.
    em2410003.jpg
  • Beirut Maronite worker in a textile factory. Coptics, Greek Orthodox, Syrians, only few components of the fragmented galaxy of the ?living stones? as often are defined the oriental christian churches, are the protagonists of a frequently forgotten world that currently menaces to die in the same places in which Christianity born. Rituals and stories similar to legends lost in time survive intact and in these places regain the strenght of a living reality.
    em2410002.jpg
  • Beirut Maronite worker in a textile factory. Coptics, Greek Orthodox, Syrians, only few components of the fragmented galaxy of the ?living stones? as often are defined the oriental christian churches, are the protagonists of a frequently forgotten world that currently menaces to die in the same places in which Christianity born. Rituals and stories similar to legends lost in time survive intact and in these places regain the strenght of a living reality.
    em2410001.jpg
  • The skyline of new skyscrapers of the new downtown along Sheick Zayed rd. Immigrant worker.
    em2800797.jpg
  • Murano island. Fondamenta dei Vetrai along the local Great Canal. At  early morning the workers deliver murano glasses at the shops before the tourist arrive by boat from Venice.
    em7112957.jpg
  • Turin. Fiat workers on strike.
    em7116026.jpg
  • Turin. Mirafiori Fiat factory, workers on strike.
    em7111064.jpg
  • Martano, workers disinfesting a olive trees plantation. The olive tree is surely the most diffused plant of the whole Salento, and probably it is the plant  that better represents the Mediterranean civilization.
    em7123109.jpg
  • Martano, workers disinfesting a olive trees plantation. The olive tree is surely the most diffused plant of the whole Salento, and probably it is the plant  that better represents the Mediterranean civilization.
    em7123105.jpg
  • Turin. Mirafiori Fiat factory, workers on strike.
    em7111020.jpg
  • Murano island. Fondamenta dei Vetrai along the local Great Canal. At  early morning the workers deliver murano glasses at the shops before the tourist arrive by boat from Venice.
    em7112955.jpg
  • Murano island. Formia glass factory, maintenance workers inspect the furnaces at late afternoon.
    em7112926.jpg
  • Murano island. Formia glass factory, maintenance workers inspect the furnaces at late afternoon.
    em7112922.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410351.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410281.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410273.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410270.jpg
  • Turin. Fiat workers on strike.
    em7116041.jpg
  • Turin. Fiat workers on strike.
    em7116037.jpg
  • Turin. Fiat workers on strike.
    em7116023.jpg
  • Turin, 1980. Fiat workers on the last big strike against Fiat dismissal of thousand of workers. The strike is rembered as "i 35 giorni" (the 35 days).
    em7111121.jpg
  • Turin, 1980. Fiat workers on the last big strike against Fiat dismissal of thousand of workers. The strike is rembered as "i 35 giorni" (the 35 days).
    em7111114.jpg
  • Turin, 1980. Fiat workers on the last big strike against Fiat dismissal of thousand of workers. The strike is rembered as "i 35 giorni" (the 35 days).
    em7111106.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. The Pachamama’s ceremony during which people sang songs and prayed in a low and high volume. The curandero would then bless the donation in order to finally burn it.  After greeting one another, those present at the ceremony sat down on blankets and skins of leather and waited for the appropriate time in order to initiate the ceremony. When the charcoal lit up, the curandero spread sacred plants and incense on it. Pachamama (Mother Earth) is a goddess revered by the indigenous people of the Andes. In Inca mythology, a fertility goddess who presides over planting and harvesting. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410320.jpg
  • Turin. Mirafiori Fiat factory, workers on strike.
    em7111024.jpg
  • Turin. Mirafiori Fiat factory, workers on strike.
    em7111010.jpg
  • Turin, 1980. Fiat workers on the last big strike against Fiat dismissal of thousand of workers. The strike is rembered as "i 35 giorni" (the 35 days).
    em7111098.jpg
  • Turin. Fiat workers on strike.
    em7111076.jpg
  • Les Baux. Today the quarry at Sarragan  is the only working mine in operation. It uses modern day equipment to replace the once 300 quarry workers who worked in the mines of les Baux during the great period of manual<br />
mining. The mining of the stone quarries at Les Baux dates back to the antiquity period. This soft stone was later mined by the Romans in open-pit quarries. Due to the facility with which the stone can be worked and sculpted it was used for heavy brickwork but also for decorative architectural elements in the nearby town of Arles.
    em7302213.jpg
  • Political meeting against the racism and migrated workers rights.
    em7112721.jpg
  • Tela: “Fiesta popular” after a meeting of workers of banana industry.
    em0410041.jpg
  • Murano island. Formia glass factory, maintenance workers inspect the furnaces at late afternoon.
    em7112922.jpg
  • Murano island. Formia glass factory, maintenance workers inspect the furnaces at late afternoon.
    em7112919.jpg
  • Comacalco. A woman working to dry the cacao seeds in Tia Tana Cooperative. Doña Sebastiana Juárez Broca, popular as Tia Tana, won in 2002 the Slow Food prize in Turin (Italy) for his chocolate. Tia Tana founded 7 cooperatives, 4 of men and 3 of womenthe First is The Chocolate Tia Tana, in honour of the woman that started the project. 1104 of Chontalpa area, between workers and families are involved.
    em0215038.jpg
  • Les Baux. Today the quarry at Sarragan  is the only working mine in operation. It uses modern day equipment to replace the once 300 quarry workers who worked in the mines of les Baux during the great period of manual<br />
mining. The mining of the stone quarries at Les Baux dates back to the antiquity period. This soft stone was later mined by the Romans in open-pit quarries. Due to the facility with which the stone can be worked and sculpted it was used for heavy brickwork but also for decorative architectural elements in the nearby town of Arles.
    em7302211.jpg
  • Turin, 1980. Fiat workers on the last big strike against Fiat dismissal of thousand of workers. The strike is rembered as "i 35 giorni" (the 35 days). Here the last strike of historical Lingotto factory, after dismissed and transformed in Fair hall and shopping mall.
    em7111094.jpg
  • Turin, 1980. Fiat workers on the last big strike against Fiat dismissal of thousand of workers. The strike is rembered as "i 35 giorni" (the 35 days).
    em7111093.jpg
  • Casco Viejo. Plaza de Francia, dedicated to the memory of the 22.000 workers, most of them from France and Antilles, died trying to build a canal.
    em0510034.jpg
  • El Calafate, Ruta Nacional 40. Road workers living on a old bus.
    em1410085.jpg
  • Workers at Marina Drive.
    em3500483.jpg
  • Deira, immigrant workers waiting any evening their wage near Dubai Creek.
    em2800937.jpg
  • Murano island. Fondamenta dei Vetrai along the local Great Canal. At  early morning the workers deliver murano glasses at the shops before the tourist arrive by boat from Venice.
    em7112960.jpg
  • Murano island. Formia glass factory, maintenance workers inspect the furnaces at late afternoon.
    em7112919.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410356.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410347.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. The Pachamama’s ceremony during which people sang songs and prayed in a low and high volume. The curandero would then bless the donation in order to finally burn it.  After greeting one another, those present at the ceremony sat down on blankets and skins of leather and waited for the appropriate time in order to initiate the ceremony. When the charcoal lit up, the curandero spread sacred plants and incense on it. Pachamama (Mother Earth) is a goddess revered by the indigenous people of the Andes. In Inca mythology, a fertility goddess who presides over planting and harvesting. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410329.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. The Pachamama’s ceremony during which people sang songs and prayed in a low and high volume. The curandero would then bless the donation in order to finally burn it.  After greeting one another, those present at the ceremony sat down on blankets and skins of leather and waited for the appropriate time in order to initiate the ceremony. When the charcoal lit up, the curandero spread sacred plants and incense on it. Pachamama (Mother Earth) is a goddess revered by the indigenous people of the Andes. In Inca mythology, a fertility goddess who presides over planting and harvesting. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410323.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. The Pachamama’s ceremony during which people sang songs and prayed in a low and high volume. The curandero would then bless the donation in order to finally burn it.  After greeting one another, those present at the ceremony sat down on blankets and skins of leather and waited for the appropriate time in order to initiate the ceremony. When the charcoal lit up, the curandero spread sacred plants and incense on it. Pachamama (Mother Earth) is a goddess revered by the indigenous people of the Andes. In Inca mythology, a fertility goddess who presides over planting and harvesting. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410321.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. The Pachamama’s ceremony during which people sang songs and prayed in a low and high volume. Here the curandero waiting to bless the donation in order to finally burn it.  After greeting one another, those present at the ceremony sat down on blankets and skins of leather and waited for the appropriate time in order to initiate the ceremony. When the charcoal lit up, the curandero spread sacred plants and incense on it. Pachamama (Mother Earth) is a goddess revered by the indigenous people of the Andes. In Inca mythology, a fertility goddess who presides over planting and harvesting. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410320.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. The Pachamama’s ceremony during which people sang songs and prayed in a low and high volume. Here the curandero waiting to  bless the donation in order to finally burn it.  After greeting one another, those present at the ceremony sat down on blankets and skins of leather and waited for the appropriate time in order to initiate the ceremony.
    em1410309.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410306.jpg
  • Highlands (puna) of Jujuy north-west area. Every year the salineros (salt mine workers) meet for the Salias Grandes Festival. Salinas Grandes salt mines built into the flat, dry highlands of the Argentine northwest, where work 100-200 salineros (salt mine workers). Covering 212 square km are the third salt mines of the world, after Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) and Salar de Arizaro (Salta).
    em1410293.jpg
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