Cruise Ship Squeeze: The New Pirates of the Seven Seas |  | Author: Ross A. Klein Publisher: New Society Publishers Category: Book
List Price: $17.95 Buy New: $8.95 as of 9/5/2010 02:07 CDT details You Save: $9.00 (50%)
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Seller: healthy-eating Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 747,402
Media: Paperback Pages: 320 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.9
ISBN: 086571522X Dewey Decimal Number: 387.542 EAN: 9780865715226 ASIN: 086571522X
Publication Date: October 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
This book is about modern pirates: those who sail huge cruise ships from one port to another, offloading thousands of visitors a day. While the industry rakes in billions of dollars a year, paying virtually no income tax, the ports that ships visit are left with relatively few crumbs. It exploits workers onboard ships, uses graft from its deep war chests to shape political decisions and influence media, and bullies administrations into accepting, for example, that Carnival’s 50 percent-plus market dominance is not anti-competitive, or that its abysmal environmental and health practices are responsible. It represents capitalism at its worst. Cruise Ship Squeeze focuses on the politics and economics of an industry that is continually subsidized by ports and by local, regional, and national governments and which runs roughshod over environmental and other laws and regulations. Through confidential documents and meetings with port officials, corporate executives, politicians, and industry insiders, cruise specialist Klein includes information never previously reported on: • Campaign contributions (1997–2004) • Health outbreaks (2002–2004) • Money spent on lobbyists (1997–2004) • Donations from industry-sponsored and -funded foundations (1996–2004) A detailed and alarming exposé of the injustices of cruise tourism, the book’s concluding chapter examines social and political action that has been directed toward the cruise industry, identifies key organizations and groups that have been effective and that have maintained their integrity, and calls on readers to help contain the industry through grassroots activism so that it becomes environmentally, socially, economically, and politically viable. Ross Klein has taken more than 30 cruises in all parts of the world, comprising over 300 days. An associate professor of social work at Memorial University in St. John’s, Newfoundland, he has written widely on the cruise business, and his previous book, Cruise Ship Blues, caused waves in the industry.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
Like FDR Said February 13, 2007 W. T. Louderback (Louisville, Kentucky) 11 out of 18 found this review helpful
As FDR famously declared, "I want you to judge me by the enemies I make!"
So, Ross A. klein is taking on the vacation cruise industry which he describes in detail as a not very good corporate citizen. Actually, a very bad one. He writes about how they use their mega-volume sales power to press everyone who works with them or for them to the absolute bottom dollar. This includes suppliers, vendors, employees, and port authorities. They're pushing the envelope far beyond efficiency to exploitation. Imagine sweatshops on a boat.
Some will say inevitably that Klein's account is hyped. On the other hand, I see plenty of footnotes in here.
Religious social justice oriented folks like me refer to this as "the race to the bottom." These super-aggressive business practices lower the standard of living of all involved. And, a lot of these folks are already at the lower end of the economic scale. This is not what we'd call "fair trade."
My hunch is folks who boycott Wal-Mart will want to boycott the vacation cruise industry. Folks who love Wal-Mart will hate this book.
On the positive side, I see that Wal-Mart is beginning to change some of its super-aggressive ways. This gives me the feeling that the vacation cruise industry can begin doing the same. Klein gives several good suggestions.
Great Customer Service September 19, 2009 Donna Grubbs (Houston, TX) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I emailed the owner that the book had not arrived yet and asked what I should do. She immediately took action and sent me a new book via priority mail.
the truth... February 8, 2009 bookworm 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
It is very simple with Ross A. Klein: If you love cruising you hate him. If you are concerned about social and environmental issues, you see him as you ally. Fact is that his books could be entitled similar to Al Gore's book/film: An inconvenient truth! It is refreshing that Klein uncovers the dirty side of the cruise industry, and speaks out. Everybody who wants to go on a cruise should read his books before they make a reservation - you might be very surprised!
A great book that shoudl be read by every tourism student as well as every cruiser...
Exellent June 13, 2008 B. A. Porfirio (Panama City) 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
Excellent book for who wants to know how the cruise industry is. Learned a lot. However, from Chapter 6 and on, if I am not mistaken, the writer expose him self to much on his opinion on how much he dislikes the cruise industry. I mean, there are environmental concerns in every industry and the cruise ships have improved a lot. Now, to spend time reading emergencies situation on board and how the big cruise lines plans everything to take advantage over passengers and ports, just in order to make the cruise industry to look bad!? No reasone for that at all. For improvements, we need to say the actual facts and not judge it before, and put it in to words to fit it in to the picture us one would like it to be. I do recommend to anyone to buy this book, you wont regret. Lot's of detailed information there that no one would find in any other book. And I've read over 6 books about cruising.
The exploitation of workers and ports by the industry March 18, 2006 D. Donovan, Editor/Sr. Reviewer (California, USA) 9 out of 20 found this review helpful
Ross A. Klein's CRUISE SHIP SQUEEZE: NEW PIRATES OF THE SEVEN SEAS examines the exploitation of workers and ports by the cruise ship industry, providing an expose of the cruise industry which provides damning accusation of the industry as capitalism at its worst. From health issues, campaign contributions and financial wrong doings to environmental challenges, legal and social issues come to light in a damning survey.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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