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Matteo Fagotto

Matteo Fagotto

Matteo Fagotto is an award-winning journalist and writer based in Milan, from where he frequently travels to Africa, Asia and the Middle East to cover social and human rights issues. His works have been published on more than one hundred media outlets worldwide, including TIME, Newsweek, The Guardian, The South China Morning Post, GQ, Wired and Vanity Fair.

Singapore’s evolution from Garden City to City in Nature has been the latest step in a decades-long process by which an urban population is learning to coexist with the natural world.

After suffering from overtourism, the Catalonian capital’s economy has been devastated by Covid-19. As residents reclaim their city, a more sustainable future is looking possible.

After decades of Soviet rule followed by a 25-year dictatorship, the Central Asian nation is slowly breaking free from the shackles of the past. Nowhere is it more apparent than in its capital, Tashkent

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A location of choice for blockbuster directors, the desert town of Ouarzazate is home to Hollywood veterans untarnished by the glitz – and fat pay cheques – of Tinseltown. But computer special effects threaten their livelihood

Workers endure poverty little changed since their 19th century ancestors began work as bonded labourers, and as industry declines and tea gardens close they struggle for food and are prey to human traffickers

"Camgirls" performing interactive sex acts online are pioneering a new type of pornography that gives them more control. Matteo Fagotto travels to Romania, the capital of this trend, to meet some of the stars. Pictures by Matilde Gattoni.

On the Indonesian island of Bangka, which provides 30 per cent of the world's tin - a vital component in the gadgetry few of us can do without - large-scale illegal mining is ravaging the environment and claiming lives, writes Matteo Fagotto. Pictures by Matilde Gattoni.