Review
The cruise line industry has a 500 million annual advertising budget. The environment, workers and customers of the industry have Ross Klein. It's a more even contest than you might imagine.-- Robert Gibson, Alternatives Journal
Cruise Ship Blues is a mine of information about what's changed, what hasn't, and what should change in the cruise industry. No cruise charm, no dull travel destination talk, no self-serving claims of corporate responsibility -- just sobering, informative, often entertaining, first-person accounting, meticulously researched. Sure to become an indispensable primer for anyone considering a cruise vacation, and a must-read for all those who endeavor to preserve the ocean realm. -- Coralie Breen, CEO/President, Oceans Blue Foundation
Come aboard the first in-depth examination of the international cruise industry, and find out why advocates for social justice, fair labor practices, equitable tax laws, environmental protection, and competent medical care have started paying attention to the ship "on the other side of the curtain." Klein's below-deck tour scuttles the "Love Boat" myth and exposes the fragile foundation supporting a multi-billion dollar industry... -- Gershon Cohen, Ph.D., Project Director, Campaign to Safeguard America's Waters, Earth Island Institute
For anyone who's ever been seduced by the cruise industry's slick ads, Ross Klein's fascinating exposé will make you think twice before booking your next voyage. The industry's dirty, dangerous and deceptive practices are more reminiscent of the Exxon Valdez than the "Love Boat," replete with scandalous tales of toxic pollution and bungled cover-ups, utter disdain for passenger health or safety, and above all, lurid accounts of greed trumping human and environmental welfare. This book causes outrage. -- Russell Long, Ph.D., former America's Cup Skipper, Executive Director, Bluewater Network
Behind all the hype and glitz of luxury cruising, there is a real story, told here by Ross Klein, whose expertise is founded on the personal experience of thirty cruises. Here "the underside of the industry is brought into daylight." Klein's readable and authoritative volume may not dim your enthusiasm for cruising, but it will open your eyes to a very troubling corporate culture that abuses both customers and workers, and threatens the environment; and it may save you some money. Forewarned is fore-armed. -- Paul Chapman, author of Trouble on Board, the Plight of International Seafarers
Cruise Ship Blues ...is well written and full of hard to get information for anyone -- cruise lovers included. It shows how millions of relatively privileged individuals engage -- mostly unreflected -- in socially and ecologically unsustainable recreational behavior. A sustainable future would call for "soft tourism," implying that the wasteful, environmentally and socially damaging cruise industry be downsized... -- Isidor Wallimann, co-editor of On the Edge of Scarcity: Environment, Resources, Population, Sustainability, and Conflict
Product Description
Cruising is one of the fastest growing industries in the world. Attracting more than 12 million passengers a year, cruise ship companies are merging to become be-hemoths. And cruise ships themselves have swollen dramatically in size, now sometimes carrying more than 5,000 people on board. Not surprisingly, this growth is causing huge problemsproblems that the industry would rather not acknowledge, and the potential cruiser would have a hard time discovering.
Cruise Ship Blues reveals the dark underside of this industry. Author Ross Klein first examines the contrast between passenger expectations of luxury and romance fostered by rosy advertising, and the seedier reality of meals, accommodations, and facilities on board. He then:
explodes the myth of the cruise as an all-inclusive vacation, demonstrating that the industrys expectation is to generate an additional $200+ per day per person
examines cruise ship safety, ringing the alarm about accidents at sea, passenger security (including the incidence of sexual assault), on-board illnesses, and medical services
juxtaposes the industrys environmentally friendly image against its actual behavior and the difficulties of effective regulation
exposes the workers experience in these "sweatshops at sea"
contrasts the industrys consumer-friendly facade with its attitude that "everything would run smoothly if it were not for the passengers"
Concluding with a discussion of what can be done to make the cruise business socially and environmentally accountable, Cruise Ship Blues offers a harsh critique as well as a call to political action. It will appeal both to those considering a cruise vacation, as well as to activists and students.
Since 1992, Ross Klein has taken more than 30 cruises in all parts of the world, comprising more than 300 days. An Associate Professor of Social Work at Memorial University in St. Johns, Newfoundland, he has written widely on the cruise industry.
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