The empty spaces between our political and geographic boundaries
Dead weeds collect along the walls of an abandoned Young Pioneer camp in southern Northern Macedonia. The camp, which closed with the breakup of Yugoslavia, was one of many similar facilities created for children in the Soviet era.
A fox looks back towards the checkpoint at the border between Lithuania, and the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad on a narrow spit that runs between the Baltic Sea and the Curonian Lagoon.
Rows of empty animal kennels on the deck of a passenger ferry crossing the Mediterranean Sea from Tunis, Tunisia to Palermo, Italy.
Signs in the ancient city of Petra, Jordan guide visitors towards the “best view” in the UNESCO World Heritage site, with a sliver of Israel visible on the horizon.
A view of the English Channel from a ferry crossing international waters between Dover, United Kingdom and Calais, France.
An abandoned restaurant sits on the shores of Nador, Morocco, a city outside the Spanish autonomous city of Melillia on the Northern coast of Africa.
A cargo ship at a port on the outskirts of Istanbul, Turkey flying a Panamanian flag prepares to load before sailing to Chornomorsk, Ukraine. The ship, which primarily transports semi-trucks and their drivers, also carries a handful of walk-on passengers making the 20-hour trip across the Black Sea.
Residents of Tiraspol swim in the Dniester River in the breakaway republic of Pridnestrovie, commonly referred to as Transnistria. North of the capitol city of Tiraspol, the river marks the boundary between the unrecognized country and Moldova, from whom it claims independence.
An alley divided line between two countries, the city of Baarle-Hertog in Belgium, and the city of Baarle-Nassau in the Netherlands. Baarle-Nassau, an exclave of Belgium lying entirely within the Netherlands, itself contains several Dutch counter-exclaves.