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“The Ethical Image: Challenges in Visualising a Changing World” was a conference that brought together leading experts from Asia and beyond working in academia, the media, and the NGO community to discuss the ethical challenges faced by those who create, publish and use images in the course of their daily work, with the Rohingya crisis being the main case study. Held at the University of Hong Kong on 6 October 2018 the event was organized by the World Press Photo Foundation ‘Explore’ program, the Journalism and Media Studies Centre of the University of Hong Kong, and Rights Exposure. It was supported by the WYNG Media Award (WMA) the Google News Initiative. This video is of the third panel, which considered how to produce and use images ethically, and included: Robert Godden, Rights Exposure - Moderator Aarti Kapoor, Managing Director and Lead Consultant, Embode Jessica Lim, Director, Angkor Photo Festival and Workshops Jennifer Pritheeva Samuel, Photo Editor, National Geographic Stanley So, Education Manager, Oxfam Hong Kong The discussions were about how visual representation of critical and global issues is both necessary and ubiquitous. Visual representation both calls attention to problems and frames possible solutions. More people than ever before have the capacity to produce, share and receive images of important issues affecting our world today, be they human rights abuses, the degradation of the environment, or economic inequality. The proliferation of images not only raises urgent questions on the ethics of creating and disseminating photos of those impacted by these issues but also requires us to re-appraise whether past critiques and responses are still appropriate and effective in our 24/7 digital world. Credit: Videos produced by the Journalism and Media Studies Centre, The University of Hong Kong.