Burma Unbound: Photos from a Waking Nation by Adam Ferguson
Photographer Adam Ferguson traveled to Burma for this week’s issue of TIME, documenting a nation fractured along ethnic and religious lines.
Photographer Adam Ferguson traveled to Burma for this week’s issue of TIME, documenting a nation fractured along ethnic and religious lines.
By the end of 2014, Afghanistan’s armed forces will take over security from the international troops that have been stationed here for more than a decade. Adam Ferguson captures the Afghan National Army in training.
2011 has been a year of iconoclasm: powerful orthodoxies were challenged, notorious villains slain and dictators came crashing down. Along the way, people took pictures. Here, the photographers behind TIME’s top 10 photos of the year share the back story behind their now iconic images.
Adam Ferguson documents how the men of the 172nd Infantry Brigade (Charlie Company, 2-28 Infantry) in Afghanistan use social media to connect to the comforts of home.
After spending the majority of the last three years covering the war in Afghanistan, I came to a point where I felt the Afghan dust was corroding the curiosity in my eyes. I needed to wander again and I found myself in Vientiane, Laos, on the bank of the meandering Mekong River.
While on assignment in Afghanistan, photographer Adam Ferguson documents the unintentional killing of an Afghan girl in a U.S.-fired mortar strike. Ferguson, who was wearing an audio recorder strapped around his neck, also captured startling sounds of war amid the tragic aftermath.