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{DOWNLOAD} The Outlaw Ocean: Journeys Across the Last Untamed Frontier [R.E.A.D]{DOWNLOAD} TheOutlaw Ocean: JourneysAcross the LastUntamed Frontier[R.E.A.D]DescriptionAmazon.com Itâ€s becoming harder to disappear on this increasingly connected, overpopulated planet, soif you're feeling hemmed in, maybe you should buy a boat. Three-fifths of the planet is covered in water, anexpanse so vast that anyone can seemingly get away with anything without consequence. The high seas havealways been where the illicit action is, and Ian Urbina—a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigativejournalist—took to the waves to find it. And did he ever. Urbina traveled the globe on a risky mission,hopping boats to amass a catalog of just about every contemptible human activity imaginable. Smugglers,traffickers, pirates, poachers, stowaways, mercenaries, and polluters fill The Outlaw Oceanâ€s more than400 pages, and the theme is overwhelming, often catastrophic degradation: of people, the environment,borders, and the rule of law (or at least its illusion). In the frigid waters of Antarcticaâ€s Southern Ocean,Urbina boards a vigilante vessel on a months-long, slow-burn chase of a notorious fish-poaching operation.In the seaside brothels of Thailand, trafficked prostitutes attract young men who are themselves consigned asslave labor on fishing boats. Armies of private “security― forces kill time aboard floating armories,waiting for their next unofficial deployments. These crimes may seem isolated and remote—drops in theocean, so to speak—but they donâ€t occur in a vacuum, or for nothing; they support choices made everyday in government, in commerce, and in our homes. The Outlaw Ocean is illuminating, terrifying, and oftendismaying. Itâ€s also unique, vitally important, and strangely thrilling. —Jon Foro, Amazon Book ReviewRead more 'The Outlaw Ocean brings the reader up close to an overwhelming truth... An impressive feat ofreporting... Urbina deftly reveals complicated ideas through his stories.'—The Washington Post'This body of work is a devastating look at the corruption, exploitation, and trafficking that thrive on theopen ocean... The writing is straightforward but clever... Eerie and beautiful.'—Outside'The OutlawOcean is enriched by Urbinaâ€s gifted storytelling about the destruction of marine life and the murder,crime, and piracy that make the seas so dangerous for those who make their living on them.'—TheNational Book Review'What we learn from Urbinaâ€s journeys is nothing less than the deepest aspects ofhumanity itself. Dropped into a world without terra firmaâ€s systems and foibles, our darkest impulsesemerge. But our most noble intentions—to save, to protect, to establish fair rule of law—appear aswell.'—Paste“In The Outlaw Ocean, Urbina focuses that eye on understanding his characters and theircontext to show why these crimes get committed and why the culprits rarely get prosecuted. Urbina goesfurther than most to do this. He shows you a problem from the front lines, by talking to the peoplethere.―—Vice'New York Times journalist Ian Urbina explores a parallel world, spanning two thirds of theEarthâ€s surface but almost entirely hidden from public scrutiny... With the worldâ€s seafood stocks incrisis, Urbina lifts the thick veil on a global criminal culture, at just the moment when the damage inflictedon the oceans is becoming terminal.'—The Guardian'The most valuable contribution of The Outlaw Oceanmay be to the literature, unfortunately quite extensive by now, of pessimism about human nature…in