Photo Essay
The latest photo stories and multimedia projects from TIME’s contributors.

A Perilous Threat to Rhinos

Dominic Nahr—Magnum for TIME

There are two groups of people shooting rhinos in southern Africa today. The first are poachers, who shoot to kill, then hack off horns and gouge out eyes. The second are game wardens, who stun with tranquilizer darts, then insert tracker microchips into the horn. TIME contract photographer Dominic Nahr captures both.

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Yuri Kozyrev—NOOR for the Magnum Foundation Emergency Fund
Photo Essay

Dispatch from Yemen: Photographs by Yuri Kozyrev

TIME contract photographer Yuri Kozyrev documents life in Yemen during a critical time in the country’s history.

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Peter Hapak for TIME
Photo Essay

Backstage with the Cuban National Ballet by Peter Hapak

TIME contract photographer Peter Hapak captured the dancers of the Cuban National Ballet in rehearsals as they prepared to embark on a US tour this month.

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Dima Gavrysh for TIME
Photo Essay

Chasing Sarah Palin’s One Nation Road Trip

TIME followed Sarah Palin’s bus tour of historic sites along the eastern seaboard, traveling nearly 400 miles from Washington DC to New York City, but still uncertain about whether she’ll run in 2012.

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Daniel Berehulak—Getty Images
Photo Essay

India’s Wild East

Photographer Daniel Berehulak documents the lives of workers in the unregulated mines of India’s Jaintia Hills.

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James Nachtwey for TIME
Photo Essay

Thailand’s Drug Scourge: Photographs by James Nachtwey

TIME contract photographer James Nachtwey documents the rising drug trade in Thailand—and the controversial rehabilitation programs.

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Edward Keating—Contact for Time
Photo Essay

A Town Lost in the Wreckage by Edward Keating

The wreckage left by the Force 5 tornado in Joplin, Missouri, defies description and baffles belief. That’s where Edward Keating comes in. The veteran photojournalist blends a tender love for Joplin. A place he knows the city from repeated visits as part of a project he is pursuing on the storied American artery Route 66. With a clear, unflinching eye he documented the aftermath of this weeks tragic storms.

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Michael Christopher Brown
Photo Essay

The War in Libya: Photographs by Michael Christopher Brown

In one of photojournalism’s blackest hours, Michael Christopher Brown was wounded with shrapnel to the chest, shoulder and arm in an explosion in Misratah, Libya, April 20, 2011 – the same incident that killed photographers Chris Hondros and Tim Hetherington, and severely injured Guy Martin.

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Corine Vermeulen
Photo Essay

Teen Moms in Detroit: Fighting to Save the School that Saved Them

The Catherine Ferguson Academy, part urban farm, part college prep, has horses grazing along the former running track, hay growing in empty lots and an apple orchard with hens running through it, all in the heart of burned-out Detroit. In a city that has a graduation rate of 62%, the academy, part of the Detroit Public Schools system, grants diplomas to 95% of their students—all pregnant teens or young mothers—and every one of them has a college acceptance letter in her back pocket.

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Peter van Agtmael—Magnum for TIME
Photo Essay

One Day After at Ground Zero

Like many New York City based photographers Peter van Agtmael rushed over to the World Trade Center Site on the eve of the killing of Osama Bin Laden to see how people would react to the news. After making some work in the crowd overtaken with the media and young revelers he decided to head home to sleep, confused by the reactions of the crowd, and waiting to see what the morning would bring.

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