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Red Gold: The Managed Extinction of the Giant Bluefin Tuna

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Red Gold: The Managed Extinction of the Giant Bluefin Tuna

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781517908515

Publisher:

University of Minnesota Press

Imprint:

University of Minnesota Press

Publication Date:

28th July 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Wildlife: aquatic creatures: general interest
Endangered species and extinction of species
Environmental policy and protocols
Agribusiness and primary industries
Hospitality and service industries

Dewey:

333.9568

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

304

Dimensions:

Width 140mm, Height 210mm, Spine 38mm

Description

Illuminating the conditions for global governance to have precipitated the devastating decline of one of the oceans most majestic creatures


The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) is the worlds foremost organization for managing and conserving tunas, seabirds, turtles, and sharks traversing international waters. Founded by treaty in 1969, ICCAT stewards what has become under its tenure one of the planets most prominent endangered fish: the Atlantic bluefin tuna. Called red gold by industry insiders for the exorbitant price her ruby-colored flesh commands in the sushi economy, the giant bluefin tuna has crashed in size and number under ICCATs custodianship.

With regulations to conserve these sea creatures in place for half a century, why have so many big bluefin tuna vanished from the Atlantic In Red Gold, Jennifer E. Telesca offers unparalleled access to ICCAT to show that the institution has faithfully executed the task assigned it by international law: to fish as hard as possible to grow national economies. ICCAT manages the bluefin not to protect them but to secure export markets for commodity empiresand, as a result, has become complicit in their extermination.

The decades of regulating fish as commodities have had disastrous consequences. Amid the mass extinction of all kinds of life today, Red Gold reacquaints the reader with the splendors of the giant bluefin tuna through vignettes that defy technoscientific and market rationales. Ultimately, this book shows, changing the way people value marine life must come not only from reforming ICCAT but from transforming the dominant culture that consents to this slaughter.

Reviews

"Both unusually thorough and unusually heartfelt, Red Gold is filled with high quality factual detail yet is framed with graceful, thoughtfully considered language. As close as Ive been to this extraordinary fish as a living creature and as the object of intense debate and conflicting policies over the years, I admire the job Jennifer Telesca has pulled off. I also learned a lot."Carl Safina, author of Song for the Blue Ocean and Becoming Wild

"Engaging and well-argued, Red Gold is an exemplary documentation of how bad-faith science conducted at the behest of corporate interests provides cover for the over-exploitation of natural resources."Daniel Pauly, author of Vanishing Fish: Shifting Baselines and the Future of Global Fisheries

"Red Gold offers a deep and disturbing portrait of the intersecting impacts of the global food chain, international regulation, and ocean conservation. Jennifer E. Telescas powerful prose and analytic insight chart the drama of human-induced species decline in the name of conservation. Combining ethnography, political economy, legal studies, and scientific research with fast-paced storytelling, she provides an intimate account of ocean governance and environmental loss."Brenda Chalfin, author of Neoliberal Frontiers: An Ethnography of Sovereignty in West Africa

"Jennifer E. Telescas wide-ranging study of the giant bluefin tuna challenges many deeply held dogmas. We overfish because of the tragedy of the commons and think the solution is regulation. But Telesca argues that we are regulating our way to extinction. The tragedy is not of the commons, but of commodification. The drive to extinction will not stop until we value these animals as fellow travelers on this planet, rather than as resources from whom we can extract value."Dale Jamieson, director, Center for Environmental and Animal Protection, New York University


"In his decades of reviewing environmental policy literature, this reviewer has encountered few books that more passionately or poetically express grief over loss of a species than this extended epitaph for the giant warm-blooded Atlantic bluefin tuna."CHOICE

"It is worth taking a deep dive into Red Gold"Public Books

"Jennifer Telesca, in her first ethnographic monograph, writes with exuberance and determination as she examines the geoeconomics of Atlantic Bluefin tuna capture fisheries management. Using Atlantic Bluefin tuna as her ethnographic subject, Telesca follows the fish on her breathtaking travels across the Atlantic and Mediterranean, and through a long history of capture by human societies."Political and Legal Anthropology Review

"Telesca brilliantly analyzes the social and cultural dimensions of institutions engineered for economic and political ends. Red Gold can be read as an excellent ethnography and sociology of science of international deliberations, marine policymaking, and fisheries science."American Anthropologist

Author Bio

Jennifer E. Telesca is assistant professor of environmental justice in the Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies at Pratt Institute.

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