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  • Making life-changing calls at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair30-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • A young mother holds her child while sitting on a street bench outside a closed 1990s Job Centre. As a result of the 1987 a stock market collapse, the UK economy experienced a downturn resulting in public services suffering a reduction, including the closure of the Job Centres of the day. The recession of the early 1990s describes the period of economic downturn affecting much of the world in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
    job_centre-12-11-1991.jpg
  • Detail of a hand holding a job magazine at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair02-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Young job-seekers get advice at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair44-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Young job-seekers get advice at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair06-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Taking notes on a stand at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair37-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • receiving advice from a CV clinic at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair22-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Young man's striped suit at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair14-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Straightening one's tie at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair46-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Audiience listening to seminar at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair40-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • Flirting with the opposite sex at a graduate expo fair where company job recruiters meet young people starting work
    grad_fair28-07-03-2008 .jpg
  • While workmen attend to a job, ladies take a sunshine break outside the Royal Festival Hall on the Southbank, on 9th May 2018, in London, England.
    festival_hall-03-09-05-2018.jpg
  • The last person to leave the office is a conscientious lady employee of the biscuit and snack manufacturer United Biscuits at their UK headquarters at Hayes Park North near London England. Seen in a window surrounded bright ceiling lights, the female sits at her desk tying up loose ends before leaving for the day. As darkness falls outside, the red lights from tail lights streak across the picture and the green grass on a landscaped bank is lit by light posts. None of her work colleages have stayed on, preferring to depart to see their families at home on this winter night. Perhaps this career woman is single and an ambitious member of the team who can dedicate more time to her job..
    united_biscuits_294.jpg
  • While workmen attend to a job, ladies take a sunshine break outside the Royal Festival Hall on the Southbank, on 9th May 2018, in London, England.
    festival_hall-02-09-05-2018.jpg
  • While delivery man take a shipment of boxes to a local address, a workman peers under the pavement during a maintenance job in Carnaby Street, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    west_end-03-05-06-2019.jpg
  • A portrait of a tough-looking local authority worker whose winter job is snow removal, on 11th January 1999, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
    quebec_canada-11-01-1999_2.jpg
  • A businessman stands over a Victorian-style shoe-shiner in a corner of Leadenhall Market in the City of London. His black shoe is resting on a small brass plinth for the leather to be buffed up with the help of Kiwi polish and the efficient speed of a good brushing technique with the final stage being a dusting to bring the best reflective shine. Their relationship is that of paying-customer and servant and we look downwards from the perspective of the wealthier man, a superior view that the client feels when paying for such a service. Wearing a red uniform, the shoe-shiner is on bended-knees, his weight resting on a soft, red cushion, protection from the cold, hard pavement while looking down, concentrating on the job in hand.
    shoeshiner-15-04-1993.jpg
  • The fantasy of an estate agent's car and the reality of a desk-bound job seen through the office window.
    estate_agent1-06-03-2012.jpg
  • Lone fishing boat makes its way through Loch Na Keal, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way. Loch na Keal National Scenic Area (NSA) embraces the coastline on the West of Mull, from Gribun cliffs to Ulva and Loch Tuath and also includes Inchkenneth, Staffa and the Treshnish Isles. NSAs are designated by Scottish Natural Heritage as areas of outstanding natural beauty. There's a road around the entire shore of Loch na Keal, so you can easily see it all. Visit Staffa and Lunga (one of the Treshnish Isles) by boat from Ulva Ferry or Fionnphort...http://www.holidaymull.co.uk/index.php?pages=landscape&a
    isle_of_mull301-21-11-2011.jpg
  • Local fisherman Neil Cameron uses creels to catch Velvet and Green Crab between Fionnphort and Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland.  Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The contents of 500 creels is taken every week by truck and sold to Spain. On each line are 25 creels that are spaced out in different areas of the nearby bays. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way.
    isle_of_mull144-19-11-2011.jpg
  • Four office workers are outside their place of employment in central London for a quick cigarette break. Puffing guiltily on their fags that have sought a dark place on the pavement beneath some shelter although it is warm enough for two of the men to wear only shirts and ties while the only lady present is in a jumper. One member of the group draws heavily on his cigarette, a sign of his addiction and enjoyment of taking a five or ten-minute pause from his office job. A recent report showed smokers each lose an average of 30 minutes a day from their  workplaces to satisfy their habit. The average smoker takes at least three breaks from the office, each lasting around 10 minutes, research for the Benenden Healthcare Society found. The healthcare group estimates that 290,000 working days are being lost by people leaving their office to smoke.
    smokers02-03-09-2007.jpg
  • A businesswoman stands seductively over a Victorian-style shoe-shiner in a corner of Leadenhall Market in the City of London. Her black shoe is resting on a small brass plinth for the leather to be buffed up with the help of Kiwi polish and the efficient speed of a good brushing technique with the final stage being a dusting to bring the best reflective shine. Their relationship is that of paying-customer and servant and we look see a sexually-dominant situation where the wealthy-looking lady is standing over the man with her strong leg showing in a provocative manner. Wearing a red uniform and ID, the shoe-shiner is on bended-knees, his weight resting on a soft, red cushion, protection from the cold, hard pavement while looking down, concentrating on the job in hand.
    RB_093-15-04-1993.jpg
  • A young office worker wearing a dark suit stands outside his place of work in a sunny Trinity Square in the City of London, for a quick cigarette break. Puffing guiltily on his fag n the pavement outside beneath the huge supporting pillars of this financial institution. He draws on his cigarette, a sign of his addiction and enjoyment of taking a five or ten-minute pause from his office job. A report showed smokers each lose an average of 30 minutes a day from their workplaces to satisfy their habit. The average smoker takes at least three breaks from the office, each lasting around 10 minutes, research for the Benenden Healthcare Society found. The healthcare group estimates that 290,000 working days are being lost by people leaving their office to smoke.
    RB_082-18-06-2005.jpg
  • A businessman stands over a Victorian-style shoe-shiner in a corner of Leadenhall Market in the City of London. His black shoe is resting on a small brass plinth for the leather to be buffed up with the help of Kiwi polish and the efficient speed of a good brushing technique with the final stage being a dusting to bring the best reflective shine. Their relationship is that of paying-customer and servant and we look downwards from the perspective of the wealthier man, a superior view that the client feels when paying for such a service. Wearing a red uniform, the shoe-shiner is on bended-knees, his weight resting on a soft, red cushion, protection from the cold, hard pavement while looking down, concentrating on the job in hand.
    city_london12-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Lone fishing boat makes its way through Loch Na Keal, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way. Loch na Keal National Scenic Area (NSA) embraces the coastline on the West of Mull, from Gribun cliffs to Ulva and Loch Tuath and also includes Inchkenneth, Staffa and the Treshnish Isles. NSAs are designated by Scottish Natural Heritage as areas of outstanding natural beauty. There's a road around the entire shore of Loch na Keal, so you can easily see it all. Visit Staffa and Lunga (one of the Treshnish Isles) by boat from Ulva Ferry or Fionnphort...http://www.holidaymull.co.uk/index.php?pages=landscape&a
    isle_of_mull301-21-11-2011.jpg
  • Local fisherman Neil Cameron shows creel-caught velvet and Green Crab caught between Fionnphort and Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The contents of 500 creels is taken every week by truck and sold to Spain. On each line are 25 creels that are spaced out in different areas of the nearby bays. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way.
    isle_of_mull154-19-11-2011.jpg
  • Local fisherman Neil Cameron uses creels to catch Velvet and Green Crab between Fionnphort and Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland.  Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The contents of 500 creels is taken every week by truck and sold to Spain. On each line are 25 creels that are spaced out in different areas of the nearby bays. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way.
    isle_of_mull144-19-11-2011.jpg
  • Local fisherman Neil Cameron hauls up creels filled with Velvet and Green Crab between Fionnphort and Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The contents of 500 creels is taken every week by truck and sold to Spain. On each line are 25 creels that are spaced out in different areas of the nearby bays. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way.
    isle_of_mull134-19-11-2011.jpg
  • Local fisherman Neil Cameron hauls up creels filled with Velvet and Green Crab between Fionnphort and Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The contents of 500 creels is taken every week by truck and sold to Spain. On each line are 25 creels that are spaced out in different areas of the nearby bays. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way.
    isle_of_mull138-19-11-2011.jpg
  • Local fisherman Neil Cameron hauls up creels filled with Velvet and Green Crab between Fionnphort and Iona, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The contents of 500 creels is taken every week by truck and sold to Spain. On each line are 25 creels that are spaced out in different areas of the nearby bays. The main fishing on the Ross of Mull, Ulva Ferry and Tobermory is now is commercial shell fishing with baited traps(creels) for lobsters (homarus gamarus), edible brown crabs( cancer pagurus), Prawn (Norwegian Lobster) and velvet swimming crab (necora puber). Scallop dredgers and Prawn trawlers also operate from both ends of the island, dragging the seabed for their catch. Before the late 1960s shell fishing with creels was generally carried out on a seasonal or part time basis allied to crofting, farming or another shore based job. Small boats today still operate this way.
    isle_of_mull136-19-11-2011.jpg
  • As a sleeping homeless man lies curled up in his sleeping bag on a central London pavement, two window cleaners have carefully placed their ladders at his feet to clean a Boots the chemist sign. Each wearing identical blue working overalls and each wiping the frontage with their left hands, the men are symbolic of the working man versus that of a homeless person without a job, prospects or perhaps a future. The wide gap between hopelessness and the pride of one's achievement is shown here on the sidewalk of modern-day Britain. London is home to some 50,000 homeless people whose place of rest can often be recesses and shop doorways where they seek sanctuary from the cold and street violence. On the opposite end of the wealth and social divides are those who seek work with a positive outlook on life.
    homeless_ladders03-16-1993.jpg
  • Sheryl is an Airport Ambassador Volunteer at Dallas Fort Worth, Texas and stands for a portrait at the foot of some escalators in the main terminal. She sports a straw hat saying 'Ask Me' in red and a name badge with her job title although she comes to the airport to assist strangers at her city's airport, hoping her good nature and charitable efforts will help uncertain travellers find their way. Also on her jacket is a the phrase 'Proud to be Drug Free .. Airport Narcotics Task Force.' 'Fort Worth is the sixth busiest airport in the world transporting 59,064,360 passengers in 2005. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903..
    aviation_corbis56-10-11-2000.jpg
  • A welder works high up from the ground from the safety of a hydraulic platform on the side of a lift shaft being constructed on a large development project on London Wall in the City of London, the capital's financial district - also known as the Square Mile. With the visor of his helmet lit by the glow from his acetylene torch, the man leans towards the detail of this close-up contact job. Oxy-fuel welding (commonly called oxyacetylene welding, oxy welding, or gas welding in the U.S.) and oxy-fuel cutting are processes that use fuel gases and oxygen to weld and cut metals, respectively.
    construction_welder07-14-03-2013.jpg
  • A businessman dozes in autumn sunshine with an elderly couple in Bank triangle in the City of London. A scene of both the pressures of a modern job in a capital city and also the years of leisure after a lifetime's career, after which a pension secures a healthy future, we see two generations - of the modern work era alongside retirement.
    city_people1-27-09-2011.jpg
  • Showing the face of a man who enjoys his job, a chef reaches for a ladle hanging inside an extractor cover in the kitchens at the Vivre restaurant in Sofitel, a 605 bedroom, 27 suite and 45 meeting room accommodation and business hub Heathrow Airport's hub hotel attached to Terminal 5. The man is wearing a tall chef's hat called a toque and his uniform is pristine to reflect the hygiene standards expected of this luxury hotel and restaurant. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1224-15-08-2009.jpg
  • A welder works high up from the ground from the safety of a hydraulic platform on the side of a lift shaft being constructed on a large development project on London Wall in the City of London, the capital's financial district - also known as the Square Mile. With the visor of his helmet lit by the glow from his acetylene torch, the man leans towards the detail of this close-up contact job. Oxy-fuel welding (commonly called oxyacetylene welding, oxy welding, or gas welding in the U.S.) and oxy-fuel cutting are processes that use fuel gases and oxygen to weld and cut metals, respectively.
    construction_welder02-14-03-2013.jpg
  • Portraits of cast members for the 'Dear Evan Hansen' musical look on to empty tables outside the Noel Coward Theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the heart of the capital's West End Theatreland, still closed to audiences during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England. Despite the government's £1.15bn financial rescue package for the Arts industry and cultural organisations in England , made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans, London's theatre industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, being closed since the March lockdown closures which has affected 137,250 Arts industry jobs, worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    st_martins_lane14-29-09-2020.jpg
  • Portraits of cast members for the 'Dear Evan Hansen' musical look on to empty tables outside the Noel Coward Theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the heart of the capital's West End Theatreland, still closed to audiences during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England. Despite the government's £1.15bn financial rescue package for the Arts industry and cultural organisations in England , made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans, London's theatre industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, being closed since the March lockdown closures which has affected 137,250 Arts industry jobs, worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    st_martins_lane13-29-09-2020.jpg
  • Theatre reviews fo ther 'Dear Evan Hansen' musical hang outside the Noel Coward Theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the heart of the capital's West End Theatreland, still closed to audiences during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England. Despite the government's £1.15bn financial rescue package for the Arts industry and cultural organisations in England , made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans, London's theatre industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, being closed since the March lockdown closures which has affected 137,250 Arts industry jobs, worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    st_martins_lane10-29-09-2020.jpg
  • Portraits of cast members for the 'Dear Evan Hansen' musical are seen through a life ring outside the Noel Coward Theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the heart of the capital's West End Theatreland, still closed to audiences during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England. Despite the government's £1.15bn financial rescue package for the Arts industry and cultural organisations in England , made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans, London's theatre industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, being closed since the March lockdown closures which has affected 137,250 Arts industry jobs, worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    st_martins_lane16-29-09-2020.jpg
  • Portraits of cast members for the 'Dear Evan Hansen' musical are seen through a life ring outside the Noel Coward Theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the heart of the capital's West End Theatreland, still closed to audiences during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England. Despite the government's £1.15bn financial rescue package for the Arts industry and cultural organisations in England , made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans, London's theatre industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, being closed since the March lockdown closures which has affected 137,250 Arts industry jobs, worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    st_martins_lane15-29-09-2020.jpg
  • Beneath a billboard ad for online jobs website LinkedIn a queue of bus passengers wait for the next service at Waterloo Station during the morning rush-hour, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-05-05-06-2019.jpg
  • Beneath a billboard ad for online jobs website LinkedIn a queue of bus passengers wait for the next service at Waterloo Station during the morning rush-hour, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-04-05-06-2019.jpg
  • An excavator and aspirational poster on wall during building of 2012 Olympic Westfield City shopping centre, Stratford. A glamorous woman sips a drink with a straw representing the good times - wealth and beauty and the symbols of affluence - while the working men are seen small in comparison, the downtrodden Man. The £1.45bn complex houses more than 300 shops, 70 restaurants, a 14-screen cinema, three hotels, a bowling alley and the UK's largest casino. It will provide the main access to the Olympic park for the 2012 Games and a central 'street' will give 75% of Olympic visitors access to the main stadium so retail space and so far 95% of the centre has been let. It is claimed that up to 8,500 permanent jobs will be created by the retail sector..
    olympic_stratford29-15-03-2012.jpg
  • Theatre reviews fo ther 'Dear Evan Hansen' musical hang outside the Noel Coward Theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the heart of the capital's West End Theatreland, still closed to audiences during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 29th September 2020, in London, Westminster, England. Despite the government's £1.15bn financial rescue package for the Arts industry and cultural organisations in England , made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans, London's theatre industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, being closed since the March lockdown closures which has affected 137,250 Arts industry jobs, worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    st_martins_lane11-29-09-2020.jpg
  • Beneath a billboard ad for online jobs website LinkedIn a queue of bus passengers wait for the next service at Waterloo Station during the morning rush-hour, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-03-05-06-2019.jpg
  • A crowd of workers listen to speeches by their trade union during a council strike in Liverpool. A sea of faces looks towards us, their expressions serious and concerned at the loss of their jobs and livelihoods. Their trade union has organised this meeting out in the open air in the city centre, a protest against unfair reduction of earnings and an erosion of working conditions. These people are English Liverpool council workers recently made redundant and have gathered in the city centre to express their willingness to act againist their former-employers.
    crowd_people-19-06-1991.jpg
  • An excavator and aspirational poster on wall during building of 2012 Olympic Westfield City shopping centre, Stratford. A glamorous woman representing the good times - wealth and beauty and the symbols of affluence - while the working Man is seen small in comparison, the downtrodden Man. The £1.45bn complex houses more than 300 shops, 70 restaurants, a 14-screen cinema, three hotels, a bowling alley and the UK's largest casino. It will provide the main access to the Olympic park for the 2012 Games and a central 'street' will give 75% of Olympic visitors access to the main stadium so retail space and so far 95% of the centre has been let. It is claimed that up to 8,500 permanent jobs will be created by the retail sector..
    olympic_stratford31-15-03-2012.jpg
  • Four small vessels belonging to traditional oyster fishermen use nets to catch a new harvest of shellfish aboard their antique boat from the Fal Estuary. On calm waters, the oystermen have harvested on the River Fal in the same traditional and highly sustainable fashion, without the use of mechanical power, for more than five hundred years, being widely grown along the whole Cornish coast when the Romans invaded, and by 1602 they were being caught in much the same way as they are today, using thick, strong nets, called dredges. Byelaws banned oyster dredging by mechanical means, forcing local fishermen to rely on wind and tide in purpose-built, sail-powered Falmouth Working Boats. Although most oyster fishermen in Falmouth have other seasonal jobs, for the most experienced and committed fishermen oysters provide a decent year-round livelihood.
    oystermen-04-10-1994.jpg
  • A Metropolitan Police diver surfaces beneath the murky waters of the River Thames in front of the tall buildings of the City of London, on 13th June 1993, in London, England. Blowing bubbles, he exhales through his oxygenated mask and looks through the Plexiglass to the viewer. The Underwater and Confined Space Search Team (UCSST), are part of the Marine Support Unit and based at Wapping. They also carry out searches in canals, ponds, lakes and reservoirs. It was set up as a full time unit in 1964. One of their most distressing jobs, however, is recovering bodies from the River. On average over 50 people lose their lives in the Thames each year and about 80% of these are by suicide (usually by jumping off one of the many bridges that cross the Thames). After a body is recovered from the River it is taken to the mortuary at Wapping Police Station for identification.
    police_diver-13-06-1993.jpg
  • Delivery workman an the anti-EU 'UK Independence Party's (UKIP) political billboard shows an escalator leading up the white cliffs of Dover (a metaphor for unrestricted immigration access to Britain) in East Dulwich - a relatively affluent district of south London. The ad is displayed before European elections on 22nd May and UKIP's controversial right-wing policy of no foreigners into the UK to take British jobs, is promising to do well in the forthcoming election.
    ukip_billboard04-09-05-2014.jpg
  • An airline flight-engineer occupies his own seat in the cockpit of a Boeing 747 - before the era arrived when technology made his role as a third flight crew member redundant. With a bowl of fresh fruit beside his seat, the male member of the flight-deck crew watches instruments and readings in front of the unseen pilots at the front. Wearing the three stripes designating his rank and seniority within his unspecified airline, the specialist's skills are in engineering systems that maintain efficient flight. When introduced, the Boeing 747-400 model was equipped with a two-crew glass cockpit, which dispensed with the need for a flight engineer - many of whom lost their jobs or retrained as pilots themselves.
    flight_engineer01-07-08-2000.jpg
  • Two Metropolitan Police officers patrol the tidal waters River Thames near Tower Bridge in London, England. In their small boat used to police and often make searches of the river in central London, their searchlight watches for people in the water - especially on Fridays and around New year. The Underwater and Confined Space Search Team (UCSST), are part of the Marine Support Unit and based at Wapping. They also carry out searches in canals, ponds, lakes and reservoirs. It was set up as a full time unit in 1964. One of their most distressing jobs, however, is recovering bodies from the River. On average over 50 people lose their lives in the Thames each year and about 80% of these are by suicide (usually by jumping off one of the many bridges that cross the Thames).
    thames_police01-18-05-1993.jpg
  • Two Metropolitan Police officers patrol the tidal waters River Thames beneath the bow HMS Belfast warship in London, England. In their small boat used to police and often make searches of the river in central London, their searchlight watches for people in the water - especially on Fridays and around New year. The Underwater and Confined Space Search Team (UCSST), are part of the Marine Support Unit and based at Wapping. They also carry out searches in canals, ponds, lakes and reservoirs. It was set up as a full time unit in 1964. One of their most distressing jobs, however, is recovering bodies from the River. On average over 50 people lose their lives in the Thames each year and about 80% of these are by suicide (usually by jumping off one of the many bridges that cross the Thames).
    thames_police-18-05-1993.jpg
  • A utopian view of a London street sweeper brushing the street in front of a hoarding showing aspiration and consumerism of nearby Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford. Situated on the fringe of the 2012 Olympic park, Westfield hosted its first day to thousands of shoppers eager to see Europe's largest urban shopping centre. The £1.45bn complex houses more than 300 shops, 70 restaurants, a 14-screen cinema, three hotels, a bowling alley and the UK's largest casino. It will provide the main access to the Olympic park for the 2012 Games and a central 'street' will give 75% of Olympic visitors access to the main stadium so retail space and so far 95% of the centre has been let. It is claimed that up to 8,500 permanent jobs will be created by the retail sector.
    olympic_stratford21-15-03-2012.jpg
  • A utopian view of a London street sweeper brushing the street in front of a hoarding showing aspiration and consumerism of nearby Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford. Situated on the fringe of the 2012 Olympic park, Westfield hosted its first day to thousands of shoppers eager to see Europe's largest urban shopping centre. The £1.45bn complex houses more than 300 shops, 70 restaurants, a 14-screen cinema, three hotels, a bowling alley and the UK's largest casino. It will provide the main access to the Olympic park for the 2012 Games and a central 'street' will give 75% of Olympic visitors access to the main stadium so retail space and so far 95% of the centre has been let. It is claimed that up to 8,500 permanent jobs will be created by the retail sector.
    olympic_stratford17-15-03-2012.jpg
  • A Metropolitan Police diver surfaces beneath the murky waters of the River Thames in front of the tall buildings of the City of London, England. Blowing bubbles, he exhales through his oxygenated mask and looks through the Plexiglass to the viewer. The Underwater and Confined Space Search Team (UCSST), are part of the Marine Support Unit and based at Wapping. They also carry out searches in canals, ponds, lakes and reservoirs. It was set up as a full time unit in 1964. One of their most distressing jobs, however, is recovering bodies from the River. On average over 50 people lose their lives in the Thames each year and about 80% of these are by suicide (usually by jumping off one of the many bridges that cross the Thames). After a body is recovered from the River it is taken to the mortuary at Wapping Police Station for identification.
    RB_094-13-06-1993.jpg
  • A pedestrian beneath two large figures on a billboard on the exterior of employers' pension provider, RPMI, their new address at Liverpool Street Station in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 24th February 2021, in London, England.
    city_mural02-24-02-2021.jpg
  • On the first day of the government's second national Coronavirus lockdown, a woman is seen from the rear in a corprate office near London Bridge in the capital's financial district, the Square Mile, on 5th November 2020, in London, England. Most workers are still working from home and the continuing pandemic restrictions are damaging small buinesses and the wider UK economy. The current lockdown is to last at least 4 weeks in the run-up to Christmas.
    coronavirus_offices01-05-11-2020.jpg
  • The exterior of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel in Victoria, London, whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel (Student Travel Australia) was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding (DKH) and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel02-24-08-2020.jpg
  • With the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown rules being eased, pubs have now re-opened and staff working under cover outside the riverside Trafalgar Tavern, a pub on the Thames at Greenwich, serve customers wearing required face shields, on 5th July 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Greenwich-08-05-07-2020.jpg
  • During the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown and on the day when a further 255 deaths occurred, bringing the official covid deaths to 37,048, <br />
an employee Fortnum & Mason wearing a face mask and face shield stands outside the famous department store on Piccadilly, in preparation for the re-opening of their Food Hall on June 15th, as per governmental guidelines, on 26th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_west_end-32-26-05-2020.jpg
  • On the day that Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak unveiled a £30bn package to boost the economy and get the country through the coronavirus outbreak, an Asian lady wearing a surgical mask walks past Royal Exchange in the capital's financial district, as the Bank of England's governor Mark Carney cut the interest rate from 0.75% to 0.25%, on 11th March 2020, in the City of London, England.
    coronavirus_city-09-11-03-2020.jpg
  • As the second week of the Coronavirus lockdown continues the UK death toll rises by 569 to 2,921, with 1m figure reported cases of Covid-19 being passed worldwide, a home-made tribute appreciating the work of NHS workers is propped up against a tree on Denmark Hill which leads to nearby Kings College Hospital in Camberwell, one of the capital's major centres treating CV-19 patients, on 2nd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_HerneHill-12-02-04-2020.jpg
  • During the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown and on the day when a further 255 deaths occurred, bringing the official covid deaths to 37,048, <br />
an employee Fortnum & Mason wearing a face mask and face shield stands outside the famous department store on Piccadilly, in preparation for the re-opening of their Food Hall on June 15th, as per governmental guidelines, on 26th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_west_end-31-26-05-2020.jpg
  • A pedestrian wearing a face covering walks beneath two large figures on a billboard on the exterior of employers' pension provider, RPMI, their new address at Liverpool Street Station in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 24th February 2021, in London, England.
    city_mural05-24-02-2021.jpg
  • In an otherwise empty City of London financial district, whose workforce are largely still working from home during the second (Autumn) spike Coronavirus pandemic, people walk through an urban landscape at Bucklersbury Passage, on 5th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_landscape02-05-10-2020.jpg
  • The exterior of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel in Victoria, London, whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel (Student Travel Australia) was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding (DKH) and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel06-24-08-2020.jpg
  • On the day that the UK death rate during the Coronavirus pandemic surpasses 40,000, including almost 10,000 care home residents, the highest rate in Europe, workmen clear a brownfield site next to a mural created by the anonymous street artist known as 'Artful Dodger' (after Charles Dickens's pickpocket character in Oliver Twist), of a Muslim NHS (National Heath Service) nurse wearing a surgical face mask, at Elephant & Castle in south London, on 121th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Elephant&Castle-02-12-05...jpg
  • As the second week of the Coronavirus lockdown continues the UK death toll rises by 569 to 2,921, with 1m figure reported cases of Covid-19 being passed worldwide, a home-made tribute appreciating the work of NHS workers is propped up against a tree on Denmark Hill which leads to nearby Kings College Hospital in Camberwell, one of the capital's major centres treating CV-19 patients, on 2nd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_HerneHill-13-02-04-2020.jpg
  • As Londoners are still told to work from home, just two bicycles are locked-up at bike racks outside the Leadenhall building during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, in the 'City of London', the capital's financial district, aka The Square Mile, on 2nd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city18-02-02-2021.jpg
  • In an otherwise empty City of London financial district, whose workforce are largely still working from home during the second (Autumn) spike Coronavirus pandemic, round tables are stacked inside a deserted office space on London Wall, on 5th October 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_office02-05-10-2020.jpg
  • Employees of Network Rail direct commuting passengers from this now exit-only entrance to Liverpool Street Station in the City of London, to an alternative around the corner during the UK Coronavirus pandemic. The UK government has today lowered the national Covid-19 alert level from 4 to 3, meaning the virus is considered to be "in general circulation .. with "a gradual reduction in restrictions". The number of deaths from Coronavirus in the last 24hrs however, has increased by 287 to 37,979,  on 19th June 2020, in the City of London, England. All passengers on the public transport system are still being asked to wear face covering.
    coronavirus_city-17-19-06-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of 'hot desking' being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho advertises in its window, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-08-14-05-2020.jpg
  • The day after UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson addressed the nation with his roadmap for the coming weeks and months during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, banners supporting and thanking NHS (National Health Service) key workers, have appeared outside the Maudsley Hospital that specialises in mental health services and is opposite King's College Hospital (one of the capital's major trauma centres and a site for Covid patients, on 11th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_camberwell-03-11-05-2020.jpg
  • On the day that Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak unveiled a £30bn package to boost the economy and get the country through the coronavirus outbreak, a lady wearing a surgical mask makes a call alongside others enjoying early Spring sunshine on the steps of Royal Exchange in the capital's financial district, as the Bank of England's governor Mark Carney cut the interest rate from 0.75% to 0.25%, on 11th March 2020, in the City of London, England.
    coronavirus_city-02-11-03-2020.jpg
  • Women City of London Police officers are mounted on their police horses in the Square Mile, the capital's financial district - still quiet as thouands of City workers remain working at home during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 1st September 2020, in London, England.
    city_police02-01-09-2020.jpg
  • A poster showing a utopian beach is seen outside the Victoria offices of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel (Student Travel Australia) was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding (DKH) and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel10-24-08-2020.jpg
  • The exterior of international budget flight and holiday booking service, STA Travel in Victoria, London, whose parent company has just announced its insolvency, a casualty of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 24th August 2020, in London, England. STA Travel (Student Travel Australia) was a travel agency specializing in youth travel. It was owned by the Swiss Diethelm Keller Holding (DKH) and employed almost 2,000 employees in over 200 stores worldwide. STA dated back to 1979 when two students in Australia organized the company after returning from their travels.
    STA_Travel04-24-08-2020.jpg
  • With the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown rules being eased, pubs have now re-opened and staff working under cover outside the riverside Trafalgar Tavern, a pub on the Thames at Greenwich, serve customers wearing required face shields, on 5th July 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Greenwich-10-05-07-2020.jpg
  • During the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown and on the day when a further 255 deaths occurred, bringing the official covid deaths to 37,048, <br />
an employee Fortnum & Mason wearing a face mask and face shield stands outside the famous department store on Piccadilly, in preparation for the re-opening of their Food Hall on June 15th, as per governmental guidelines, on 26th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_west_end-34-26-05-2020.jpg
  • As Londoners are still told to work from home, just two bicycles are locked-up at bike racks outside the Leadenhall building during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, in the 'City of London', the capital's financial district, aka The Square Mile, on 2nd February 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city17-02-02-2021.jpg
  • In an otherwise empty City of London financial district, whose workforce are largely still working from home during the second (Autumn) spike Coronavirus pandemic, people walk through an urban landscape at Bucklersbury Passage, on 5th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_landscape01-05-10-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of 'hot desking' being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho welcomes through its doors, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-15-14-05-2020.jpg
  • With most Londoners still working from home, a lone commuter walks on a widened Old Board Street pavement at evening rush-hour during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 26th February 2021, in London, England.
    city_evening01-26-02-2021.jpg
  • During a quiet afternoon on Upper Thames Street during the Coronavirus pandemic, a woman walks past the London office of asset management services corporate, Nomura in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 29th July 2020, in London, England.
    fuji_test28-29-07-2020.jpg
  • A sunlit detail of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange13-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With most Londoners still working from home, a lone commuter walks on a widened Old Board Street pavement at evening rush-hour during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 26th February 2021, in London, England.
    city_evening07-26-02-2021.jpg
  • With most Londoners still working from home, a lone commuter walks on a widened Old Board Street pavement at evening rush-hour during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 26th February 2021, in London, England.
    city_evening02-26-02-2021.jpg
  • A waiter runs up the steps of Royal Exchange where Fortnum & Mason have set up an outdoor restaurant and bar opposite the Bank of England in the City of London, during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 9th September 2020, in London, England.on 16th September 2020, in London, England.
    fortnum&mason02-16-09-2020.jpg
  • On the day that covid pandemic guidelines for shoppers in England mean that the wearing of face coverings in shops is mandatory, workmen carry construction plasterboard past social distancing  guidelines in Knightbridge, on 24th July 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shoppers02-24-07-2020.jpg
  • A sunlit detail of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange18-27-02-2021.jpg
  • An employee of London bookshop retailer, Foyles makes changes to the window of the books and literature retailer on Charing Cross Road, during the Coronavirus pandemic at a time when only some retailers and business are re-opening while office workers still largely work from home, on 2nd September 2020, in London, England.
    foyles_exterior03-02-09-2020.jpg
  • On the day that the UK death rate during the Coronavirus pandemic surpasses 40,000, including almost 10,000 care home residents, the highest rate in Europe, Londoners walk past a mural created by the anonymous street artist known as 'Artful Dodger' (after Charles Dickens's pickpocket character in Oliver Twist), of a Muslim NHS (National Heath Service) nurse wearing a surgical face mask, at Elephant & Castle in south London, on 121th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Elephant&Castle-01-12-05...jpg
  • The day after UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson addressed the nation with his roadmap for the coming weeks and months during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, a Londoner walks past a mural created by the anonymous street artist known as 'Artful Dodger' (after Charles Dickens's pickpocket character in Oliver Twist), of a Muslim NHS (National Heath Service) nurse wearing a surgical face mask, at Elephant & Castle in south London, on 11th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_elephant&Castle-02-11-05...jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange39-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange32-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With the columns of Royal Exchange in the background, cyclists and a London bus are queued at a red light in at Bank Triangle and  in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England.
    royal_exchange_traffic09-27-02-2021.jpg
  • An employee of London bookshop retailer, Foyles makes changes to the window of the books and literature retailer on Charing Cross Road, during the Coronavirus pandemic at a time when only some retailers and business are re-opening while office workers still largely work from home, on 2nd September 2020, in London, England.
    foyles_exterior02-02-09-2020.jpg
  • With nearby streets blocked off, a convoy of heavy high-security vehicles carrying high-value assets is accompanied by an armed escort of police officers into the Lothbury entrance of the Bank of England, on 1st March 2021, in London, England.
    city_security03-01-03-2021.jpg
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