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Showing 641-680 result returned for "all at sea"
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News & Media
Dec 21, 2012Sierra Leone arrest pirate vessel using donated Isle of Man patrol boatRead
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News & Media
Nov 16, 2012EJF responds to the first EU warning to countries involved in pirate fishingRead
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News & Media
Nov 14, 2012Ethical fashion launch party at EJF’s Pop Up ShopRead
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Reports
Oct 11, 2012Pirate Fishing ExposedRead
This report by EJF exposes the continued role of the European Union and East Asian countries in facilitating a market for seafood illegally caught in West Africa. Following a two-year investigation by The Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF), “Pirate Fishing Exposed: The Fight Against Illegal Fishing in West Africa and the EU” highlights how local fishing communities are fighting back to combat this illegal trade.
During the two-year surveillance investigation, EJF documented rampant pirate fishing in Sierra Leone and laundering of the illegal catch into the European seafood market by vessels accredited to export fish to the EU.
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News & Media
Oct 11, 2012EJF launches new report: Pirate Fishing ExposedRead
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News & Media
Oct 05, 2012Climate Alert: September 2012Read
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News & Media
Sep 21, 2012Sierra Leone issues record fineRead
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News & Media
Sep 19, 2012Massive clamp-down on illegal fishing in Sierra LeoneRead
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News & Media
Sep 17, 2012Cyclists complete ride to Brighton for EJF!!Read
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Films
Sep 16, 2012All At SeaRead
All At Sea
An EJF film that exposes the abuse of human rights on illegal fishing vessels.
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, or pirate fishing, has been recognised as one of the major threats to the world's fish stocks. However, the focus so far has mostly been on the impacts on marine life and on local fishing communities. While these problems are extremely serious, there's one more that is rarely reported: human rights violations. Escaping regulatory checks on their catches, IUU vessel operators frequently get away with seriously abusing the human rights of their crews.
In this film, we look at the conditions in which people on board vessels that engage in pirate fishing live and work.
All at Sea was screened at the 13th UN Association Film Festival in 2010.
Soundtrack by Tom Strang.
With thanks to the sound studio 4AM Productions.
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Films
Sep 12, 2012All At Sea (Short Version)Read
All At Sea (Short Version)
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, or pirate fishing, has been recognised as one of the major threats to the world's fish stocks. However, the focus so far has mostly been on the impacts on marine life and on local fishing communities. While these problems are extremely serious, there's one more that is rarely reported: human rights violations. Escaping regulatory checks on their catches, IUU vessel operators frequently get away with seriously abusing the human rights of their crews. In this film, we look at the conditions in which people on board vessels that engage in pirate fishing live and work.
All at Sea was screened at the 13th UN Association Film Festival in 2010.
Soundtrack by Tom Strang.
With thanks to the sound studio 4AM Productions.
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News & Media
Aug 31, 2012Climate Alert: July - August 2012Read
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News & Media
Jul 25, 2012update from ejf's oceans teamRead
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News & Media
May 18, 2012European Parliament hearing calls for more action on climate change by the EURead
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News & Media
May 14, 2012Come dine with usRead
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Films
Mar 15, 2012Cod Save The SeaRead
Cod Save The Sea
Watch EJF's new video following the launch of the new Cod Save The Sea T-shirt at London Fashion Week 2011.
The Cod Save The Sea T-shirt is part of The Rodnik Band’s Spring/Summer 2012 collection inspired by EJF’s work to end pirate fishing.
The Rodnik Band, who caused a stir at New York and London Fashion Weeks this season, created a collection of the brand's signature "art dresses", from aquatic shades of fish to chips-shaped ball gowns and submarine trench coats.
Get your Cod Save The Sea T-shirt at http://www.just-for.co.uk/.
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Films
Mar 14, 2012No Place Like Home: IntroductionRead
No Place Like Home: Introduction
By 2050, there will be an estimated 150 million climate refugees - people forced to leave their homes by droughts, extreme weather patterns and sea level rise associated with climate change. There is no international law designed to protect these most vulnerable people and their needs.
President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives and Premier Talagi of Niue told EJF about how climate change is affecting their countries.
EJF is calling for international protection for climate refugees. We believe that that there needs to be a legally-binding, international Protocol that identifies and protects these people displaced from their homes by deteriorating environmental conditions. We campaign for a new Special Rapporteur on human rights and climate change to be established in the United Nations Human Rights Council.
Human rights should be at the heart of international action on climate change.
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News & Media
Mar 14, 2012Switch energy supplier to Ecotricity and help EJF protect people and planetRead
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Films
Feb 29, 2012Plunder of the Oceans - EJF at the Frontline ClubRead
Plunder of the Oceans - EJF at the Frontline Club
(Audio only)
EJF's Ocean Campaigner Andy Hickman speaks at the Frontline Club on the 7th June. Short film screening of Deadly Catch, followed by a discussion with an expert panel and audience Q&A. Chaired by Tom Clarke, science correspondent Channel 4 News. Domitilla Senni, policy adviser to the Pew Environment Group since 2006. John Pearce is a Senior Consultant at MRAG Ltd.
One of the single biggest factors in ocean degradation is overfishing. Fish stocks have declined dramatically, with as much as 90% of big fish gone in some parts of the global ocean. More than one billion people rely on fish as their main source of protein globally. As catches decline and quotas and rules are tightened in response, there has been a huge increase in illegal, unreported or unregulated (IUU) or “pirate” fishing.
Pirate fishing is estimated to make up almost one-fifth of the global catch, and respects neither national boundaries nor international attempts to manage ocean resources. The recent seizure of £4 million worth of seafood in the Spanish port of Las Palmas, allegedly caught illegally in west African waters and headed for dinner tables in Europe, serves to highlight this growing criminal trade, which exploits lax regulations at ports and on the high seas, and often involves serious human rights infringements.
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News & Media
Feb 10, 2012Sierra Leone meeting signals progress towards combating pirate fishingRead
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Films
Feb 06, 2012Jade Parfitt supports the Climate Week T-shirt for EJFRead
Jade Parfitt supports the Climate Week T-shirt for EJF
Jade Parfitt's message at the photoshoot for the Climate Week T-shirt in support of EJF's No Place Like Home campaign.
People are being forced from their homes and land by deteriorating environmental conditions linked to climate change. Conditions like creeping desertification, flooding, rising sea levels and more intense extreme weather events. Some will be forced to leave temporarily, others permanently.
EJF believes that there needs to be a new legally-binding instrument identifying and protecting climate refugees. -
Films
Feb 05, 2012KT Tunstall supports the Climate Week T-shirt for EJFRead
KT Tunstall supports the Climate Week T-shirt for EJF
KT Tunstall's message at the photoshoot for the Climate Week T-shirt in support of EJF's No Place Like Home campaign.
People are being forced from their homes and land by deteriorating environmental conditions linked to climate change. Conditions like creeping desertification, flooding, rising sea levels and more intense extreme weather events. Some will be forced to leave temporarily, others permanently.
EJF believes that there needs to be a new legally-binding instrument identifying and protecting climate refugees. -
Films
Feb 04, 2012Wonderland support the Climate Week T-shirt in support for EJFRead
Wonderland support the Climate Week T-shirt in support for EJF
Girlband Wonderland's message at the photoshoot for the Climate Week T-shirt in support of EJF's No Place Like Home campaign.
People are being forced from their homes and land by deteriorating environmental conditions linked to climate change. Conditions like creeping desertification, flooding, rising sea levels and more intense extreme weather events. Some will be forced to leave temporarily, others permanently.
EJF believes that there needs to be a new legally-binding instrument identifying and protecting climate refugees. -
News & Media
Jan 25, 2012Illegal fishing clamp-down in Sierra LeoneRead
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News & Media
Oct 31, 2011PechaKucha-inspired EJF event on climate refugeesRead
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News & Media
Aug 08, 2011Retailer Call To Action: Save the SeaRead
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News & Media
Aug 01, 2011Pirate fishing vessel seized in LiberiaRead
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News & Media
Jul 25, 2011Security Council under fire over climate changeRead
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News & Media
Jul 08, 2011Ceremony held to open new EJF office in Bonthe, Sierra LeoneRead
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News & Media
Apr 30, 2011A Global Ban on EndosulfanRead
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News & Media
Apr 20, 2011Fish worth £4m seized in EU crackdown on illegal fishingRead
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News & Media
Feb 23, 2011EJF invited by UK Government to discuss Uzbek cottonRead
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News & Media
Jan 24, 2011More Endosulfan victims in IndiaRead
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News & Media
Oct 10, 2010Government recognition for EJFRead
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News & Media
Sep 30, 2010EJF releases new reportRead
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News & Media
Sep 30, 2010The Guardian: Modern day slavery in the fishing industryRead
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News & Media
Sep 16, 2010EJF’s boat involved in rescue at seaRead
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Reports
Jan 01, 2010All At SeaRead
The report provides case studies from West Africa, Southeast Asia, the Indian and Pacific Oceans, all regions with high incidences of illegal fishing. Human rights abuses directly documented by EJF and other organisations, including the International Transport Workers Federation (ITF), include physical and emotional abuse, incarceration, forced labour without pay, abandonment, and reports of murder.
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Reports
Dec 31, 2005White Gold: The True Cost of CottonRead
This internationally acclaimed report exposes how the billion-dollar cotton industry is causing an environmental catastrophe and human rights abuses in Uzbekistan, Central Asia.
White Gold highlights the disastrous demise of the Aral Sea as the rivers that once fed it have been diverted to irrigate cotton fields. The report also draws attention to the endemic use of forced child labour in the annual cotton harvest. Uzbekistan is unique for the scale of forced child labour - hundreds of thousands of children are forced to labour in the fields undergoing arduous work for little or no pay.
Detailed investigations by EJF expose the use of cotton revenues in Uzbekistan to support a corrupt, brutal and coercive dictatorship.
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Reports
Feb 02, 2004Desert in the DeltaRead
The report summarises the abuses and problems associated with shrimp production in Bangladesh, while defining potential solutions. Researched over an 18-month period, it incorporates over 250 references and, crucially, the personal testimony of Bangladeshi individuals directly affected by the shrimp industry.
This report is one of a series documenting EJF’s international investigations into the social, economic and environmental impacts resulting from shrimp production and consumption.