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Contested seascapes

The leaky ideology of marine freedom
by
September 2022, no. 446

The Poseidon Project: The struggle to govern the world’s oceans by David Bosco

Oxford University Press, £22.99 hb, 315 pp

Contested seascapes

The leaky ideology of marine freedom
by
September 2022, no. 446
The aircraft carrier USS Constellation in the South China Sea during the Vietnam War  (GRANGER - Historical Picture Archive/Alamy)
The aircraft carrier USS Constellation in the South China Sea during the Vietnam War (GRANGER - Historical Picture Archive/Alamy)

In early 2020, as the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic took hold, a special kind of viral hazard appeared upon the surface of the sea. Offshore from Sydney, Yokohama, San Francisco, and elsewhere loitered cruise liners turned floating hot spots. As they awaited permission to dock and disembark their passengers, the boats became an inadvertent exhibition of cruising-industry foibles. Behind sluggish and patchy Covid action plans, we learned, lurked other forms of misbehaviour, from grotesquely unscrupulous labour practices to systematic tax avoidance. The high seas, it seemed, really were wild.

Killian Quigley reviews 'The Poseidon Project: The struggle to govern the world’s oceans' by David Bosco

The Poseidon Project: The struggle to govern the world’s oceans

by David Bosco

Oxford University Press, £22.99 hb, 315 pp

From the New Issue