I am a photojournalist and documentary photographer based in Rabat, Morocco, working primarily in the country while remaining open to broader geographies. I began photographing at fifteen and have since developed a practice rooted in long-term documentary work and reported projects. My work focuses on social, political, and environmental transformations and how they register in everyday life. Grounded in research and fieldwork, my projects engage with questions of housing, labor, food systems, youth, and public space, often in moments of transition. Rather than concentrating on events alone, I am interested in their aftermath and in the quieter realities that follow institutional or structural change. Morocco remains central to my work, both as a place of origin and as a site where global dynamics, economic pressure, climate change, migration, and governance intersect at a local scale. Through this lens, I aim to situate individual experiences within broader systems, without reducing them to symbols or narratives of crisis. I work with a documentary approach informed by photojournalistic methods, combining observation, research, and long-term engagement. Access is built through relationships, and ethical considerations guide my practice, particularly in contexts where visibility may increase vulnerability. Alongside commissioned assignments, I develop personal projects that engage with memory, place, and archival material, using photography as a tool to reflect on continuity and change over time. My work has been published by outlets including Libération (France). I am an alumnus of the Eddie Adams Workshop and a recipient of the Grand Prix Face à la Mer at the Rencontres de la Photographie de Tanger.

mouadzerhouni3@gmail.com

+212 664240252

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