Foreign Policy Magazine

Are journalists checking their privilege when covering refugees?

For all the connectivity enveloping the world, how well do humans really know one another? That question is at the heart of photographer TOBIAS ZIELONY’s project The Citizen. Exhibited at the 2015 Venice Biennale, the series captured the challenges that activist-refugees from Africa face while living in Germany. Writer ANNA BADKHEN examines similar themes in her work. She has embedded with nomadic herders in Mali, carpet weavers in Afghanistan, and fishermen in Senegal—experiences that have shaped her perspective on community, displacement, and empathy. Badkhen, from the capital of Senegal, and Zielony, from Berlin, recently connected on the phone to discuss who lives on global society’s fringes (hint: maybe not the poor) and how to avoid creating journalism that’s merely background noise.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
What In The World?
1. Hearings on whether Israel was committing acts of genocide in Gaza began at the International Court of Justice in The Hague in January. Which African nation petitioned the case? a. South Africa b. Nigeria c. Mozambique d. Egypt 2. How old did Nort
Foreign Policy Magazine6 min readInternational Relations
The Biden Doctrine Will Make Things Worse
Does the United States need a “Biden Doctrine for the Middle East”? I ask because Thomas Friedman laid it out in the New York Times in late January. Apparently, the Biden administration is prepared to take a “strong and resolute stand on Iran,” advan
Foreign Policy Magazine6 min readWorld
Ukraine Isn’t Just Putin’s War
For years, as Moscow’s intent to challenge the West became clearer, a key question loomed: whether the country as a whole or its leader was at fault—in effect, whether the world had a Russia problem or a Putin problem. Since the full-scale invasion o

Related Books & Audiobooks