July • 2021
Amanda was responsive during pre-production and very efficient with her image turnaround. She produced some beautiful images for a very last-minute shoot. I will work with her again in the future!
Washington, DC, USA
5 reviews$350 - $1000 / Day
Request QuoteAmanda Voisard is a visual journalist who specializes in social issue short-form documentaries. Voisard works for leading publications such as The Washington Post, MSNBC, Getty Images, Reuters, The New York Times and is annually contracted in the photo department of the United Nations. After a year of covering the civil-war in South Sudan a multimedia video producer, Voisard returned to the United States. In 2012, she received a M.A in multimedia journalism from Syracuse University during which time she also worked in the photography department at The Washington Post. Prior to this, Voisard was a member of the award winning staff at The Palm Beach Post.
July • 2021
Amanda was responsive during pre-production and very efficient with her image turnaround. She produced some beautiful images for a very last-minute shoot. I will work with her again in the future!
June • 2019
Amanda communicated clearly every step of the way. She handled a sensitive situation with respect and was adaptable in the field. I can endorse her for reporting on the transgender community.
How Black trans women are responding to violent deaths in their community.
One-sixth of the worldwide population—more than 1 billion people—suffers from one or more neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). These diseases devastate the world’s most vulnerable populations, striking the almost exclusively poor and powerless people in rural areas and urban slums in low-income countries. Many NTDs cause severe disfigurement and disability, including blindness. NTDs come hand-in-hand with poverty because they thrive where access to clean water and sanitation is limited. These diseases, in turn, contribute to poverty because they can impair intellectual development in children, reduce school enrollment, and stymie economic productivity.
I am woman, Hear Me Code
Produced and edited project on HearMeCode, a women only free coding group in Washington D.C., for MSNBC
Since 2016, over 1 million South Sudanese have fled the civil war in their young country flooding across the border into Uganda and neighboring countries. Stories of horrific atrocities – murder, rape, looting, disease, burning homes and famine – plague the people of this war-torn nation which celebrated its independence just six years ago. The fastest growing refugee crisis in the world, Uganda i
In Rio Grande Valley, a life-altering limbo as asylum process shifts in United States. https://www.statesman.com/photogallery/TX/20180623/PHOTOGALLERY/306239990/PH/1
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