Winners of the 2024 World Press Photo Contest

The winning entries of the annual World Press Photo Contest ​have just been announced. This year, according to organizers, 61,062 images were submitted for judging, made by 3,851 photographers from 130 different countries. World Press Photo was once again kind enough to share some of this year’s global and regional winners, gathered below.

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Winners of the 2024 World Press Photo Contest

5 0
18.04.2024

Winners of the 2024 World Press Photo Contest

  • Alan Taylor
  • 1:12 PM ET
  • 21 Photos
  • In Focus

The winning entries of the annual World Press Photo Contest ​have just been announced. This year, according to organizers, 61,062 images were submitted for judging, made by 3,851 photographers from 130 different countries. World Press Photo was once again kind enough to share some of this year’s global and regional winners, gathered below.

Read more Hints: View this page full screen. Skip to the next and previous photo by typing j/k or ←/→.

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  • Europe, Winner, Singles—A Father’s Pain: Mesut Hançer holds the hand of his 15-year-old daughter, Irmak, who died in the earthquake in Kahramanmaraş, Turkey, the day after the 7.8-magnitude quake struck the country's southeast, on February 7, 2023. Rescuers in Turkey and Syria braved frigid weather, aftershocks, and collapsing buildings as they dug for survivors buried by an earthquake that killed more than 50,000 people. #

    Adem Altan / Agence France-Presse

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  • North and Central America, Winner, Stories—Saving the Monarchs: Butterflies stream through protected indigenous fir forests in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve. The mountain hillsides of Oyamel forest provide an ideal overwintering microclimate. Michoacán, Mexico, February 24, 2023. #

    Jaime Rojo / National Geographic

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  • Winner, World Press Photo Open Format Award—War Is Personal (1 of 2): Amid tens of thousands of civilian and military casualties and an effective stalemate that has lasted for months, there are no signs of peace on the horizon for Russia’s war in Ukraine. While news media update their audiences with statistics and maps, and international attention drifts elsewhere, the photographer Julia Kochetova has created a personal website that brings together photojournalism with the personal documentary style of a diary to show the world what it is like to live with war as an everyday reality. #

    Julia Kochetova

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  • Winner, World Press Photo Open Format Award—War Is Personal (2 of 2): Amid tens of thousands of civilian and military casualties and an effective stalemate that has lasted for months, there are no signs of peace on the horizon for Russia’s war in Ukraine. While news media update their audiences with statistics and maps, and international attention drifts elsewhere, the photographer Julia Kochetova has created a personal website that brings together photojournalism with the personal documentary style of a diary to show the world what it is like to live with war as an everyday reality. #

    Julia Kochetovaa

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  • South America, Winner, Long-Term Projects—Mapuche: The Return of the Ancient Voices (1 of 2): Mapuche communities are the Indigenous inhabitants of territories that are now part of Argentina and Chile. Much of their ancestral land is being commercially exploited—for mining, forestry, and hydroelectric projects in Chile, and fracking in Argentina. Discrimination and punishment of Mapuche activists persist, despite new laws apparently supporting Mapuche rights. For many Mapuche, this presents not solely a territorial dispute: The land is part of their cultural and spiritual identity. Commercial degradation of the environment violates a balance among nature, ancestors, and human health. Here, cousins and friends of Rafael Nahuel swim in the Ñirihuau River. Nahuel (22) was killed during a raid by government forces on Indigenous activists in November 2017. Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina, January 29, 2019. #

    Pablo E. Piovano, Greenpeace Award, GEO, National Geographic Society

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  • South America, Winner, Long-Term Projects—Mapuche: The Return of the Ancient Voices (2 of 2): Children wear traditional Ngillatun masks in a Mapuche cemetery. The local community successfully opposed the building of a hydroelectric dam that would have flooded an adjacent ceremonial site. Maihue, Los Ríos, Chile, July 28, 2019. #

    Pablo E. Piovano, Greenpeace Award, GEO, National Geographic Society

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  • South America, Winner,........

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