British photographer wins CENTER Award 2012 for her latest story, The National Womb from Nagorno Karabakh

Anastasia Taylor-Lind, photographer from London, has won the Project Award 2012, organized by CENTER, a non-profit photographic organization in Santa Fe. Taylor-Lind was selected for "The National Womb: Baby Boom in Nagorno Karabakh."

The NKR Foreign Ministry reports that Taylor-Lind's work tells about the birth rate stimulation program in Nagorno Karabakh, where the authorities provide couples with cash benefits for every newborn child to improve the demographic situation in the country that was severely damaged during the war unleashed by Azerbaijan.

The photographer will receive US$10,000 prize and an opportunity to introduce her work in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

The juries of the contest comprised representatives of Denmark, Mexico, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Great Britain and USA.  The event organizers say that Taylor-Lind's story tells about Karabakh at the same time touching upon universal problems.

Related articles

Popular

Editor's choice
Interview
Thursday Interview: Murad Muradov

Thursday Interview: Murad Muradov

Today, commonspace.eu starts a new regular weekly series. THURSDAY INTERVIEW, conducted by Lauri Nikulainen, will host  persons who are thinkers, opinion shapers, and implementors in their countries and spheres. We start the series with an interview with Murad Muradov, a leading person in Azerbaijan's think tank community. He is also the first co-chair of the Action Committee for a new Armenian-Azerbaijani Dialogue. Last September he made history by being the first Azerbaijani civil society activist to visit Armenia after the 44 day war, and the start of the peace process. Speaking about this visit Murad Muradov said: "My experience was largely positive. My negative expectations luckily didn’t play out. The discussions were respectful, the panel format bringing together experts from Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey was particularly valuable during the NATO Rose-Roth Seminar in Yerevan, and media coverage, while varied in tone, remained largely constructive. Some media outlets though attempted to represent me as more of a government mouthpiece than an independent expert, which was totally misleading.  Overall, I see these initiatives as important steps in rebuilding trust and normalising professional engagement. The fact that soon a larger Azerbaijani civil society visits to Armenia followed, reinforces the sense that this process is moving in the right direction." (click the image to read the interview in full)