Aubrey Wade

Wade spent seven years exploring the lives of former fighters and marginalized youths in Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, following the end of the war.

[2] His most notable project is the ongoing No Stranger Place, documenting people in Austria, Germany and Sweden that voluntary housed refugees of the 2015 migrant crisis with them when state facilities were over-run.

This fictional adaptation of a long-term field research by UK-based Conciliation Resources looks at the tension in the Mano River border region of West Africa.

[2] Wade's work has appeared regularly in weekend supplements to London newspapers The Telegraph,[11] The Guardian,[12] The Observer, The Sunday Times and The Independent.

He has also been published in magazines Foto8,[13] mare, D (La Repubblica delle Donne), Le Point, Smithsonian and The Fader.