"Isabella Lövin writes with great passion and
clarity about the crisis facing global fish stocks.
Exposing the weak short termism of governments, and the
persistent failure of the EU fisheries policy to act on
the clear science, her warning is unequivocal: act soon
or lose vast sections of this vital source of food
forever. But it's not all gloom and doom. She is clear
that this is a solvable problem - and that until
governments legislate more responsibly, consumer action
is the best means for bringing about change. A
compelling book, that all those who care about the
future of our oceans will want to read." HUGH
FERNLEY-WHITTINGSTALL, HUGH'S FISH FIGHT "Who would have
thought that Sweden, of all places, would have allowed
its fisheries to reach the sorry state documented in
Isabella Lövin's essential book? We are surprised and
dismayed, but should we be? What Ms. Lövin demonstrates
is that the public's notion about fisheries being benign
stakeholders of the sea is deeply flawed. Rather,
fisheries, as presently 'managed', are actively
destroying marine ecosystems and public resources with
the financial and administrative support of governments.
Ms. Lövin uses the Baltic, and the eel and cod as her
main examples, yet this bok is not about Sweden and the
Baltic - it is about a mindset prevailing throughout
Europe and in much of the world, and which we
desperately need to change. This book will make you want
to join the battle." DR. DANIEL PAULY, FISHERIES CENTRE,
UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLOMBIA "Silent Seas is the Da
Vinci Code of fisheries policy. A page turner where the
same question keeps turning over and over inside your
head: Who is the killer? Who killed our seas? " STEFAN
NYSTRÖM, SWEDISH FISHERIES MAGAZINE "Read Silent Seas.
Then contact your MP!" GUNVOR HILLDEN, UPSALA NYA
NEWSPAPER Silent seas was first published in Swedish in
2007, and was soon awarded no less than 14 prizes, among
which the prestigious Great Journalism Award, the
Investigative Journalism Award, the Environmental
Journalism of the Year Award and the Baltic Sea Award.
Isabella Lövin became a candidate for the Swedish Greens
in the elections for the European parliament in 2009,
and is now actively working to reform the EU common
fisheries policy. The present English edition has been
updated, and a new foreword has been added in
2012.
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