Description: Caught in the Net : The Global Tuna Industry, Environmentalists, and the State, Paperback by Bonanno, Alessandro; Constance, Douglas, ISBN 0700607390, ISBN-13 9780700607396, Brand New, Free shipping in the US The 1973 Marine Mammal Protection Act at first appeared to be a major victory for environmentalists. It banned the use of oversized fishing nets in an attempt to save thousands of dolphins killed each year in tuna harvests. But hampered by exemptions, extensions, delays, and quotas, MMPA has instead created international turmoil in the tuna industry while still allowing some 20,000 dolphin deaths each year. In this revealing book, Alessandro Bonanno and Douglas Constance use the tuna-dolphin controversy to explore the rapidly increasing effects of globalization on agricultural and food production. Illustrating how private industries, political institutions, national economies, and social movements have been swept into a global arena, they reach some intriguing and important conclusions about the complex and sometimes bewildering future of industry and the environment. Analyzing the controversy's outcome, they show how relatively small groups can, with effective organization, pass legislation that fundamentally changes the way corporations do business. The globalization that often results, they contend, can have wide-reaching consequencesmany of them unintended and unpredictable. Following passage of MMPA, . tuna processors turned to foreign suppliers of "dolphin-safe" tuna while . tuna fishing corporations deserted the . marketcircumventing MMPA altogether. Bilateral international agreements, GATT, NAFTA, and the . federal courts have intervened in the chaos and have been challenged from all sides-from the Bush Administration to Bumble Bee Tuna, from Greenpeace to the European Economic Community. Through it all, independent owners of fishing boats have been forced out of business, . processing jobs have moved overseas, and environmentalists have continued their dolphin campaign. Even those who appear to be benefiting may not be, the authors demonstrate. Despite increased opportunities for some foreign labor forces, the weakest segmentsespecially in developing countriescontinue to be exploited. Stressing the limits that individual nations face in the current socio-economic climate and the conflicting agendas of a variety of labor and environmental movements, Bonanno and Constance argue that the regulatory ability of any national governmenteven one with strong society supportmust be rethought and redefined.
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Book Title: Caught in the Net : The Global Tuna Industry, Environmentalists,
Number of Pages: 304 Pages
Language: English
Publication Name: Caught in the Net : the Global Tuna Industry, Environmentalism, and the State
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication Year: 1996
Item Height: 0.9 in
Subject: Life Sciences / Ecology, Environmental Conservation & Protection, Natural Resources, Fisheries & Aquaculture, Sociology / Rural
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 12.3 Oz
Subject Area: Nature, Law, Technology & Engineering, Social Science, Science
Author: Alessandro Bonanno, Douglas Constance
Item Length: 9 in
Item Width: 6 in
Format: Trade Paperback