POPULARITY
(00:00:44) La paix en Ukraine est-elle possible? Analyse de Maurine Mercier (00:05:03) Enquêter sur les océans, poumons de notre planète... zones de non droit. Itv de Ian Urbina, fondateur de The Outlaw Ocean Project (00:14:48) Reportage au Chili sur la chantier du plus grand télescope du monde
Over fifty million people work on our oceans around the world and over 80% of the goods we consume are delivered by vessels navigating them. But when it comes to maintaining law and order on the high seas, is there anyone really in charge? Journalist Ian Urbina has spent over a decade trying to get to the bottom of this and other pressing questions. The result is The Outlaw Ocean Project, a multiplatform reporting effort whose goal is to support and encourage ethically sourced accountability journalism of all that takes place in or atop our vast oceans. Director and Founder Ian Urbina joins The Excerpt to talk about his work trying to bring accountability to the high seas. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
FFAW president Dwan Street tells the House of Commons committee on fisheries that changes in the Fisheries Act should include the means to prevent corporate controlling agreements + Ian Urbina, director of the Outlaw Ocean Project, says there are ways that regular people can help prevent and curb ocean pollution and unethical fishing practices.
Radio-Canada reporter Patrick Butler on why some scientists believe Ottawa ignored its own rules on stock management when it reopened northern cod fishery + Audience reaction to cod stock rebuilding plan in 3PS + Austin Brush of the Outlaw Ocean Project on the push for Canada to sanction China over its human rights violations on the high seas.
Gerry Byrne is in PEI to meet with other fisheries ministers and is demanding that Ottawa change course on its decision to reopen northern cod fishery + Ian Urbina of the Outlaw Ocean Project says reporting on crime and abuse in China's seafood industry is having a positive impact.
Where does your seafood come from? And who, along the supply chain, handled it? An investigation from the non-profit investigative journalism organization, Outlaw Ocean Project, reveals a network of North Korean labourers at Chinese seafood plants – a violation of United Nations sanctions – supplying certain Canadian seafood companies. The workers detail a pattern of hyper-surveillance, poor pay and sexual assault by their employers.Ian Urbina, executive editor of The Outlaw Ocean Project, joins The Decibel to discuss the findings of the investigation, the working conditions inside the processing plants and how products made from forced labour are ending up on Canadian store shelves.VIDEO: Investigation reveals North Korean forced labour in Chinese seafood plantsThis episode originally aired on April 9, 2024.Questions? Comments? Ideas? Email us at thedecibel@globeandmail.com
Ray and Jim talk to Ian Urbina, Director of the Outlaw Ocean Project about the vast, lawless areas of the sea where dark, extra-legal, often destructive and inhumane activities take place. Ian highlights the ethical concern for the well-being of the 50 million people who work at sea, the environmental impact of the oceans as the earth's climate stabilizer and source of biodiversity, and the fascinating stories that unfold in this hidden world. He also delves into the issues of overfishing--especially China's immense distant-water fishing fleet--and human rights abuses in the fishing industry.
Today's guest is Ian Urbina. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist who left The New York Times in 2019 to start The Outlaw Ocean Project. The Project's mission is to produce ”investigative stories about human rights, environment and labor concerns on the two-thirds of the planet covered by water.” On today's show, he and Andy discuss investigating murder on the open ocean, forced labor on fishing vessels, the special operations veterans who now hunt pirates, and more. You can learn more about his work at https://www.theoutlawocean.com/ SPONSORS: Change Agents is presented by Montana Knife Company. Use CODE "CHANGEAGENTS10" for 10% off your first order at https://www.montanaknifecompany.com/ MTNTOUGH Go to https://mtntough.com and enter code CHANGE to receive 40% OFF - a savings of about $100 your MTNTOUGH+ annual subscription. Four Branches Bourbon Check out their story at https://www.fourbranches.com and pick up a bottle of their fine bourbon today. Use the code “IRONCLAD10” to get 10% off. Change Agents is an IRONCLAD Original.
Americans love shrimp. They love it so much they don't think too hard about where it comes from—or the virtual slaves who are farming them. Joshua Farinella doesn't have that luxury.A few years ago, Farinella took a job working for a shrimp production company in India. The money they were paying would set his family up for a long time to come, but what he saw when he landed in the country made him realize the cash wasn't worth it. He chose to blow the whistle.On this episode of Angry Planet, Farinella sits down with us to talk about what he saw in the shrimp factory. It all starts one fateful night when he receives a WhatsApp message telling him that one of the plant's workers was caught in the place's water treatment facility. “She was searching for a way out of there,” the message said. “Her contractor is not allowing her to go home.”After Farinella decided to blow the whistle, he began to document what he saw at the plant. Video, audio, and documents he secured can be viewed at The Outlaw Ocean Project. Read The Whistleblower at The Outlaw Ocean ProjectRead through the documents.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Where does your seafood come from? And who, along the supply chain, handled it? An investigation from the non-profit investigative journalism organization, Outlaw Ocean Project, reveals a network of North Korean labourers at Chinese seafood plants – a violation of United Nations sanctions – supplying certain Canadian seafood companies. The workers detail a pattern of hyper-surveillance, poor pay and sexual assault by their employers.Ian Urbina, executive editor of The Outlaw Ocean Project, joins The Decibel to discuss the findings of the investigation, the working conditions inside the processing plants and how products made from forced labour are ending up on Canadian store shelves.VIDEO: Investigation reveals North Korean forced labour in Chinese seafood plantsQuestions? Comments? Ideas? Email us at thedecibel@globeandmail.com
durée : 00:59:06 - Cultures Monde - par : Julie Gacon, Mélanie Chalandon - Première flotte de pêche mondiale, la Chine est une grande adepte de la pêche intensive aux calamars qu'elle pratique dans les eaux internationales. Ce modèle de pêche au rythme effréné inquiète certains pays dont les pêcheurs peinent à concurrencer le géant chinois. - invités : Sébastien Colin Maître de conférences en géographie à l'Inalco et chercheur à l'Institut français de recherche sur l'Asie de l'Est (IFRAE); Ian Urbina Journaliste d'investigation américain, directeur et fondateur de The Outlaw Ocean Project
In this episode of the Captain Paul Watson Foundation Podcast, we will be speaking with Joshua Farinella. Joshua was a general manager at a shrimp canning plant in India. During Joshua's time there, he became very concerned with many of the practices the company was using in order to pass audits and maintain their monthly production goals. Joshua is a courageous whistleblower who has gathered a great deal of evidence that exposes the harsh realities shrimp farming. Join us as we talk about his experience in India and his decision to shed light on the truth.If you would like to know more about Joshua's story, you can go to the Outlaw Ocean Project to read their investigative report - https://www.theoutlawocean.com/investigations/india-shrimp-a-growing-goliath/the-whistleblower/ Support the showhttps://www.paulwatsonfoundation.org/https://shop.paulwatson.com/
The Indian shrimp industry was hit with accusations of human rights and environmental abuses last week from three different reports that were released by Outlaw Ocean Project, The Associated Press and Corporate Accountability Lab. Seafoodnews Podcast co-hosts Amanda Buckle and Lorin Castiglione break down some of the reporting — and backlash —in the latest episode. The Seafoodnews Podcast is brought to you by Urner Barry's Executive Conference. Join the UB team LIVE from the Palazzo Tower at The Venetian Resort in Las Vegas from April 14-16 for the must-attend conference for the protein industry! Engage with key industry figures, gain priceless economic and market insights, and participate in unmissable networking opportunities. Visit events.urnerbarry.com to learn more.
In the latest episode of The Food Professor Podcast, presented by Caddle, we kick off our new monthly Rapid Response segment featuring Colleen Martin from Caddle with Canadians' perceptions of ungraded Mexican beef on our grocery shelves. This timely discussion sheds light on consumer awareness, concerns, and the potential impact on purchasing decisions.But first, we examine international beef regulations, highlighting the U.S.'s push for stricter "Made in U.S.A." standards and the Canadian Cattle Association's critique, labelling them overly stringent. The episode also touches on Aldi's significant expansion plans in the U.S., speculating on the implications for the Canadian market. A particularly eye-opening segment of the podcast covers the exploitation of North Korean labour in the Chinese seafood industry, as the Globe & Mail and the Outlaw Ocean Project reported. This investigation reveals how products processed by forced labour are entering North American markets despite United Nations sanctions and Canadian legislation to prevent such imports.Finally, the podcast addresses public opinion on the causes of high food prices in Canada, citing a Leger poll that points to global factors, grocery retailers, and federal policies as key contributors. The episode concludes with discussing HelloFresh's plummeting shares and the broader impacts on the meal kit industry.https://askcaddle.com/the-food-professor-podcast/https://www.theoutlawocean.com/https://leger360.com/surveys/inflation-at-the-grocery-store/ The Food Professor #podcast is presented by Caddle. About UsDr. Sylvain Charlebois is a Professor in food distribution and policy in the Faculties of Management and Agriculture at Dalhousie University in Halifax. He is also the Senior Director of the Agri-food Analytics Lab, also located at Dalhousie University. Before joining Dalhousie, he was affiliated with the University of Guelph's Arrell Food Institute, which he co-founded. Known as “The Food Professor”, his current research interest lies in the broad area of food distribution, security and safety. Google Scholar ranks him as one of the world's most cited scholars in food supply chain management, food value chains and traceability.He has authored five books on global food systems, his most recent one published in 2017 by Wiley-Blackwell entitled “Food Safety, Risk Intelligence and Benchmarking”. He has also published over 500 peer-reviewed journal articles in several academic publications. Furthermore, his research has been featured in several newspapers and media groups, including The Lancet, The Economist, the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, BBC, NBC, ABC, Fox News, Foreign Affairs, the Globe & Mail, the National Post and the Toronto Star.Dr. Charlebois sits on a few company boards, and supports many organizations as a special advisor, including some publicly traded companies. Charlebois is also a member of the Scientific Council of the Business Scientific Institute, based in Luxemburg. Dr. Charlebois is a member of the Global Food Traceability Centre's Advisory Board based in Washington DC, and a member of the National Scientific Committee of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) in Ottawa.About MichaelMichael is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc. and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada and the Bank of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice. He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience with Levi's, Black & Decker, Hudson's Bay, Today's Shopping Choice and Pandora Jewellery.Michael has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career. He has delivered keynotes, hosted fire-side discussions with C-level executives and participated worldwide in thought leadership panels. ReThink Retail has added Michael to their prestigious Top Global Retail Influencers list for 2024 for the fourth year in a row.Michael is also the president of Maven Media, producing a network of leading trade podcasts, including Remarkable Retail , with best-selling author Steve Dennis, now ranked one of the top retail podcasts in the world.Based in San Francisco, Global eCommerce Leaders podcast explores global cross-border issues and opportunities for eCommerce brands and retailers.Last but not least, Michael is the producer and host of the "Last Request Barbeque" channel on YouTube, where he cooks meals to die for - and collaborates with top brands as a food and product influencer across North America
Andrew Careen says harvesters are fed-up with many aspects of the fishing industry + Journalist Ian Urbina of the Outlaw Ocean Project says North Koreans working in Chinese fish plants are kept like prisoners, and often abused at the hands of their managers.
Journalist Ian Urbina's investigation into the China seafood processing sector has already had a huge effect on the supply chain. His latest story in the series, part of the Outlaw Ocean Project, uncovered even more forced labor violations by some of the largest seafood processing companies. We brought Urbina on to the podcast to ask him about the story behind the story, and what seafood companies can and should do next. You can subscribe to our podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Read more: https://www.intrafish.com/opinion/chinas-seafood-supply-chain-has-been-broken-for-years-the-industry-has-looked-the-other-way-/2-1-1604567 https://www.intrafish.com/opinion/cheap-labor-often-comes-at-a-high-price-and-we-are-all-complicit-it-is-time-to-change-the-rules-of-the-supply-chain-/2-1-1537675 https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/10/16/the-crimes-behind-the-seafood-you-eat https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/03/04/inside-north-koreas-forced-labor-program-in-china https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-uyghurs-forced-to-process-the-worlds-fish
An investigation reveals a covert collaboration between North Korean labour brokers and Chinese companies who use deceptive practices to ‘employ' workers from North Korea. Guest: Ian Urbina, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Investigative Reporter, Founding Director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, and Author of The New York Times Article “North Korea's Forced-Labor Program” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Seg 1: If we were built for exercise, why do we avoid it? Due to our bipedal gait and unique sweat glands, humans are very good at long-distance running. Despite evolving for extended physical exertion. Guest: Dr. Dean Burnett, Neuroscientist and Author of “Emotional Ignorance” Seg 2: Do you enjoy hobbies? If you ask someone what they do for a hobby, are they going to tell you something like skiing, sewing or puzzles? Or are they going to shy away from telling you because the answer might be connected to a social media time waster? But is social media a hobby? Guest: Scott Shantz, Contributor for Mornings with Simi Seg 3: View From Victoria: The Federal NDP are taking a victory lap but no word locally from the provincial NDP government on what the implications could be to BC. We get a local look at the top political stories with the help of Vancouver Sun columnist Vaughn Palmer. Seg 4: How will the Afzaal family tragedy influence Canada's legal system? In June 2021, the Afzaal family faced a tragic incident in London, Ontario, where Nathaniel Veltman deliberately struck them during an evening walk. This act resulted in the death of four family members. Guest: Dr. Jack Rozdilsky, Professor of Disaster and Emergency Management of Terrorism at York University Seg 5: The return of the “Green Men” It was a big win for the Canuck's on the weekend and while the game was a good one, the attention was on “The Green Men” Guest: Sully (Ryan Sullivan), One of the Green Men Seg 6: Should BC improve how it supports kids with Dyslexia? Dyslexia BC is critical of the 2024 budget, which inadequately addresses dyslexic students' needs. While the budget allocates $30 million for screening and literacy support, the organization argues that it covers only 6% of the affected population. Guest: Cathy McMillan, Founding Member of Dyslexia BC Seg 7: Does our seafood come from a North Korean forced labour ring? An investigation reveals a covert collaboration between North Korean labour brokers and Chinese companies who use deceptive practices to ‘employ' workers from North Korea. Guest: Ian Urbina, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Investigative Reporter, Founding Director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, and Author of The New York Times Article “North Korea's Forced-Labor Program” Seg 8: Is sexism dominating the wine industry? In "Wine Witch on Fire: Rising from the Ashes of Divorce, Defamation, and Drinking Too Much," wine writer Natalie MacLean shares a candid memoir blending personal reflection, wine expertise, and historical tales of witches. Guest: Natalie MacLean, Author of "Wine Witch on Fire: Rising from the Ashes of Divorce, Defamation, and Drinking Too Much" Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Diese Folge Ocean Crime bietet ein exklusives Gespräch mit dem renommierten Journalisten und Direktor des Outlaw Ocean Project, Ian Urbana. Die gemeinnützige Organisation setzt sich leidenschaftlich für Menschenrechte und Umweltbelange ein, insbesondere im Bereich der Meere. In einer vierjährigen Recherche zur chinesischen Hochseefischereiflotte untersuchte Ian die Arbeitsbedingungen auf See und berichtet über schockierende Erkenntnisse zu Zwangsarbeit und illegalem Fischfang. Die Recherche erstreckt sich von brisanten Fakten bis zu persönlichen Schicksalen, wie dem tragischen Fall von Daniel, einem indonesischen Arbeiter, der auf einem chinesischen Tintenfisch-Schiff misshandelt wurde. Heute erfährst du, wie das "Outlaw Ocean Project" mithilfe von investigativen Techniken erstmals Interviews mit der Besatzung der chinesischen Fischereiflotte führen konnte. Die Enthüllungen zu ökologischen und menschlichen Aspekten rücken China als zentrale Supermacht der Fischerei in den Fokus, nicht nur auf See, sondern auch bei der Verarbeitung von Fisch, der in Europa konsumiert wird. Ian beleuchtet auch die existenzielle Bedrohung für den Planeten durch die Übernutzung der Ozeane und die rasante Abnahme der Meereslebewesen. Er teilt seine schockierenden Erfahrungen mit den gigantischen Schleppnetzen in der industriellen Fischerei und gibt überraschende Einblicke in die Menschlichkeit der Arbeiter unter extremen Bedingungen. Wie die Reaktionen auf Ians Recherche aussehen und was du gegen diesen Crime tun kannst, erfährst du am Ende der Folge. Ian appelliert, sich aktiv zu informieren, die Kaufpraxis zu überdenken, zu spenden, die Stimme zu erheben und politischen Einfluss auszuüben, um zur Lösung der aufgedeckten Probleme beizutragen.
The fish on your plate in New Jersey probably came from far away. China dominates the global seafood industry, with a massive fleet trolling oceans around the world and sprawling processing plants shipping out frozen products far and wide. Much of that ends up in American restaurants, cafeterias and grocery stores. But it is often a tainted catch. A recently published multi-year reporting effort from The Outlaw Ocean Project unveiled forced labor, human abuses and illegal fishing practices employed by the Chinese industry to meet the world's seafood appetite. This special edition of "NJ Spotlight News with Briana Vannozzi" highlights that reporting, sharing a pair of short documentaries that highlight issues with squid fishing in particular, and an interview with Ian Urbina, the executive editor of The Outlaw Ocean Project
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ian Urbina's latest investigations into the Chinese distant-water fishing fleet has uncovered human rights and labour abuses. The Chinese foreign fishing fleet is an armada of over 4,600 vessels, including in the Pacific, accounting for 14 percent of worldwide marine catch, by value. For this investigation, Urbina has boarded Chinese vessels and exchanged messages in bottles with crew. Ian Urbina heads The Outlaw Ocean Project, a non-profit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C. focusing on reporting environmental and human rights crimes at sea.
Ian Urbina is a journalist, the director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, and the author of The Outlaw Ocean: Journeys Across the Last Untamed Frontier. What We Discuss with Ian Urbina: What makes the ocean the Earth's final untamed frontier? Who has jurisdiction to enforce laws in international waters? For that matter, what are the laws, and who makes them? How does slavery persist on the open ocean? Who is most vulnerable to finding themselves enslaved, and who is profiting from their misery? What percentage of the fishing that supplies Western cities with delicious seafood is illegal? What can we do to ensure we're not supporting high crimes on the high seas? And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/856 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!
The world's oceans are, in many ways, lawless places where piracy, overfishing, toxic waste dumping and even murder are routine. William Brangham spoke with journalist Ian Urbina, head of the Outlaw Ocean Project, about cold-blooded killings on the water. A warning: this story includes disturbing details. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
The world's oceans are, in many ways, lawless places where piracy, overfishing, toxic waste dumping and even murder are routine. William Brangham spoke with journalist Ian Urbina, head of the Outlaw Ocean Project, about cold-blooded killings on the water. A warning: this story includes disturbing details. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
In this episode of Upwell, we chat with Ian Urbina, founder and director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, author of The Outlaw Ocean, host of The Outlaw Ocean Podcast, and a long-time investigative reporter covering stories about human rights, environment and labor concerns at sea. In the conversation, we discuss lawlessness at sea, the “maritime merry-go-round” that makes it hard to effectively prosecute crimes committed in the ocean, how overfishing is depleting the fish stocks of a small African country, and the investment of time and resources that goes into deep, investigative reporting. You can find Ian on Twitter and Instagram, and learn more about The Outlaw Ocean Project on their website, YouTube, and their new podcast. Additional Resources:Learn more about the mission of The Outlaw Ocean ProjectListen to the new Outlaw Ocean PodcastIan's investigative series The Outlaw Ocean for The New York TimesIan's New Yorker article on the negative effects of fishmeal production in Gambia
On this episode of the Richard Crouse Podcast we meet Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ian Urbina, host of “The Outlaw Ocean.” The project began years ago as a series in The New York Times, where he was a staff writer. Between the articles, a book on the subject and now the podcast, the journey took more than four years, spanning 40 cities and every continent, and over 12,000 nautical miles across five oceans and 20 other seas. In the podcast Urbina explores a gritty and lawless realm, populated by traffickers and smugglers, pirates and mercenaries, wreck thieves and repo men, vigilante conservationists, seabound abortion providers, clandestine oil dumpers, shackled slaves and cast-adrift stowaways. “The Outlaw Ocean” is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the L.A. Times. Learn more about The Outlaw Ocean Project, a non-profit journalism organization that produces investigative stories about human rights, at theoutlawocean.com. Then, we'll meet Scott Goodson, the author of “Activate Brand Purpose: How To Harness The Power Of Movements To Transform Your Company” and founder and CEO of advertising and marketing agency StrawberryFrog. He Zooms in, from New York City, to talk about purpose driven companies and why consumers care about what a company stands for and what its values might be.
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
The high seas are beyond the reach of international law – and beyond the beat of most reporters. But Pulitzer-Prize-winner and former New York Times journalist, Ian Urbina, has sailed into uncharted territories. Urbina sets out on a years-long quest to investigate murder at sea, modern slave labour, environmental crimes and quixotic adventurers. Part travelog, part true-crime thriller, this 7-part series takes listeners to places where the laws of the land no longer exist. The Outlaw Ocean is brought to you by CBC Podcasts and the LA Times and produced by The Outlaw Ocean Project. More episodes are available at http://hyperurl.co/theoutlawocean
Ian Urbina – The Outlaw Ocean Project...with TRE's Hannah Murray
The open ocean is about as foreign as it gets. No country can claim it. And as a result, a whole lot of bad stuff happens there. Ian Urbina (@ian_urbina) talks about his series of stories for The New York Times about lawlessness at sea, that later became a book and now a non-profit journalism initiative called The Outlaw Ocean Project. Urbina will also talk about how his stories were made into two Hollywood movies and how he was part of a team that won a Pulitzer for reporting on the Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal. Countries featured: Libya, USA, Singapore Publications featured: New York Times, New Yorker Here are links to some of the things we talked about: The Outlaw Ocean Project website - https://bit.ly/3NVRkac Ian's series on fracking Drilling Down - https://nyti.ms/3tfSN3e His piece on magazine crews that inspired American Honey - https://nyti.ms/3xaFQca The Pulitzer Prize winning reporting on Eliot Spitzer - https://bit.ly/3zeN9Ct His book Outlaw Ocean - https://amzn.to/3zeJFji His New Yorker piece on Libya - https://bit.ly/38PFcc5 Behind the scenes on reporting the Libya piece - https://bit.ly/3aHLkDR Jennifer Senior's 9/11 piece for the Atlantic - https://bit.ly/39YDVMT Luke Mogelson's article Among the Insurrectionists - https://bit.ly/3alcd05 Follow us on Twitter @foreignpod or on Facebook at facebook.com/foreignpod Music: LoveChances (makaihbeats.net) by Makaih Beats From: freemusicarchive.org CC BY NC
Before many African migrants even see Europe, they are captured and imprisoned in migrant detention camps in Libya. These detention centers, while run by Libyan militias, were funded and enabled to be run by the European Union.In this episode, Clint speaks with Ian Urbina, director of the Outlaw Ocean Project, a nonprofit journalism initiative exploring lawlessness on the high seas, who recently published a piece in the New Yorker “The Secretive Prisons That Keep Migrants Out of Europe”. He uncovered human rights abuses taking place in migrant detention camps in Libya and the international systems enabling the continued operation of these prisons.
“The media”. This is the 21st century’s term for journalism—netizens have clocked how many online publications are nothing more than content-churners. However, more care should be taken to separate what we understand as “journalism” and “media”. Rather than protect the privilege of a free press, we’ve begun using the laziest blanket word which puts journalism in the firing line alongside institutions like Facebook. The result is terrifying, but blame doesn’t lie solely with readers.This week’s guest shines a light on how journalism needs to evolve to protect both itself and its purpose—especially during this critical period in history.Planet: Critical is a resource for a world in crisis, supported by people like you. Join the community by becoming a subscriber today.Pulitzer-prize winning investigative journalist, Ian Urbina, spent 17 years at the New York Times before setting up his own non-profit newsroom in 2020, The Ocean Outlaw Project. Ian and his team investigate “the final frontier”, finding stories at the intersection of environment and human rights which typically go under the radar.The Outlaw Ocean Project models itself after ProPublica, and Ian’s explanation as to how these newsrooms can and must work alongside “legacy” newspapers is absolutely fascinating. We discuss the responsibility of journalists during a crisis, and sharing that responsibility with readers. The innovation at the heart of Ian’s work is really thrilling. Listen to the full interview here, catch it on on Apple or Spotify, or watch on Youtube. You’ll find the bonus episode on Youtube over the weekend, and paid subscribers have access to the interview transcript.Learn more about The Outlaw Ocean Project.You can also follow Planet: Critical on Youtube and support the project on Patreon. Read the interview transcript here.© Rachel Donald Get full access to Planet: Critical at www.planetcritical.com/subscribe
Our guest today is Ian Urbina, the director of The Outlaw Ocean Project. The project is a non-profit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C., that produces investigative stories about human rights, environment, and labor concerns on the open seas.Urbina won a Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News and a George Polk Award for Foreign Reporting. Several of his stories have been adapted into major feature films, and his reporting for a New York Times Magazine article called The Secret Life Of Passwords was nominated for an Emmy Award.He has degrees in history and cultural anthropology from Georgetown University and the University of Chicago, respectively. Before joining The New York Times for roughly 17 years as a staff reporter, he was a Fulbright Fellow in Cuba, and he also wrote about the Middle East and Africa for various outlets including the Los Angeles Times, Harper's, and Vanity Fair.On this episode, we talk to Urbina about the Outlaw Ocean Music Project, an offshoot of The Outlaw Ocean Project that's "[a]imed at people who might not otherwise have encountered this reporting." According to the project's website, "[T]he music renders stories more viscerally, and delivers them to the public through different channels. The music project's goal is to raise awareness and stoke a sense of urgency about the human rights, labor, and environmental abuses that occur at sea.”If you want more free insights, follow our podcast, our blog, and our socials.If you're an artist with a free Chartmetric account, sign up for the artist plan, made exclusively for you, here.If you're new to Chartmetric, follow the URL above after creating a free account here.
After hearing New York Times Book Review editor Pamela Paul call Ian Urbina's The Outlaw Ocean “one of the best narrative non-fiction books by a journalist I've ever read,” we instantly decided to invite Ian on Book Dreams and were thrilled when he accepted. A Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist, Ian based The Outlaw Ocean on five years of reporting on the lawlessness of the high seas. We spoke with Ian about atrocities committed at sea–including murder, human trafficking, and environmental devastation–and why the oceans “often get exploited more than protected.” We talked, too, about what there is to learn about human nature and the potentially devastating consequences of capitalism in the absence of just and enforced governance. Our conversation took an unexpected and shocking turn when we asked Ian about the dangers he has faced while reporting from some of the most perilous places in the world. This is an episode you will want to listen to until the very end. Ian Urbina spent roughly 17 years as a staff reporter for The New York Times. He's received various journalism awards, including a Pulitzer Prize, a George Polk Award, and an Emmy nomination. The Outlaw Ocean: Journeys Across the Last Untamed Frontier is a New York Times bestseller. Ian is now Director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, a nonprofit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C. that produces investigative stories about human rights, environment, and labor concerns on the two-thirds of the planet that is covered by water. Find us on Twitter (@bookdreamspod) and Instagram (@bookdreamspodcast), or email us at contact@bookdreamspodcast.com. We encourage you to visit our website and sign up for our newsletter for information about our episodes, guests, and more. Book Dreams is a part of Lit Hub Radio and the Podglomerate network, a company that produces, distributes, and monetizes podcasts. For more information on how The Podglomerate treats data, please see our Privacy Policy. Since you're listening to Book Dreams, we'd like to suggest you also try other Podglomerate shows about literature, writing, and storytelling like Storybound and The History of Literature. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How can our society and economy benefit from thinking beyond the mental disabilities that people live with to see their skills and value to our organisations with more inclusive strategies. How is China's fishmeal industry in Africa illogical and irresponsible creating a variety of problems for people, planet and even profits over the long term. How can using the entire vegetable save on food waste and make delicious meals and products? All these questions are answered in this 30-minute chat between sustainability-focused consultants Tove & Joy this week. Tove & Joy are both sustainability-focused consultants in Japan- join us as we talk about sustainable news, topics and great books in our LIVE weekly 30-min chat. LINKS for Today's Topics: BBC The Green Planet- Weeds as Pioneers: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0blh1ph (https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0blh1ph) Japan Organization Tackling Food Waste by using Ugly Vegetables - Food Canning https://www.farmcanning.com/ (https://www.farmcanning.com/) Farm Canning YouTube Channel for Cooking Ideas https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZHwt6uWV61h1Amm2BM_NRw (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZHwt6uWV61h1Amm2BM_NRw) Earthship Mima in Tokushima: https://www.earthshipmima.com/ Zenbird Media - https://zenbird.media/ (https://zenbird.media/) Interview with Roger Ong of Zenbird Media 2/10 9am: https://youtu.be/S5-8GbGXhDc (https://youtu.be/S5-8GbGXhDc) Interview with Ian Urbina founder of https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCykiIhv2wP4-BftEiKb241Q ( @The Outlaw Ocean Project ) https://youtu.be/UEzagu6Y1As Interview on Sustainable Housing and EV's with Kevin and Scott https://youtu.be/QAZppK5iTuQ (https://youtu.be/QAZppK5iTuQ) #sustainable #sustainableshorttakes #japan #sustainability #sdgs #sdgsjapan #consultants #consulting #sustainabilitystrategy #sustainableinnovation #esg #businessunusual About Tove: Tove Kinooka is a Yokohama/Tokyo-based sustainability consultant who co-founded Global Perspectives: "Creating sustainability driven organisations and leaders to deliver financial, social and environmental sustainability for all your stakeholders" http://www.globalperspectives.biz/ (http://www.globalperspectives.biz/) About Joy: Joy Jarman-Walsh (JJWalsh) is a Hiroshima-based sustainability-focused consultant & content creator who hosts the weekly "Seeking Sustainability LIVE in Japan" talkshow and podcast - interviews with "Good People doing Great Things to keep People-Planet-Profit in balance." == About JJWalsh - InboundAmbassador - Seek Sustainable Japan Talkshow-Podcast == Seek Sustainable Japan is a talkshow and podcast interview series hosted by JJWalsh an American expat long-time Hiroshima, Japan based educator, content creator and entrepreneur. Official Websites: https://www.inboundambassador.com (https://www.inboundambassador.com) / https://www.seeksustainablejapan.com (https://www.seeksustainablejapan.com) #seeksustainablejapan ~~~ Listen to the SeekingSustainability LIVE Talkshow on Podcast [AUDIO] http://www.inboundambassador.com/ssl-podcasts/ (http://www.inboundambassador.com/ssl-podcasts/) ALL Talks in Seek Sustainable Japan (April 2020~) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcyYXjRuE20GsvS0rEOgSiQVAyKbEFSRP (https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcyYXjRuE20GsvS0rEOgSiQVAyKbEFSRP) JJWalsh Official InboundAmbassador Website: https://www.inboundambassador.com/ (https://www.inboundambassador.com/) Please join, become a monthly sponsor or a 1-time donation supporter on YouTube / Patreon / BuyMeACoffee / or KoFi - every little bit helps keep Seek Sustainable Japan going, thank you! All Links: https://linktr.ee/jjwalsh (https://linktr.ee/jjwalsh) ~~~ Music by Hana Victoria Music rights to "Won't you See" purchased for Seek Sustainable Japan 2022 Hana Victoria Short Bio My name is Hana Victoria, and I am a Japanese-American singer songwriter who dreams of inspiring, encouraging and empowering others...
Despite the huge issues on our oceans that effect people, planet and profits, the oceans have often been ignored in journalism. Ian Urbina has written the New York Times bestseller "The Outlaw Ocean" and started a non-profit under the same name to promote awareness and journalism of the many important ocean-related issues and news stories. https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCykiIhv2wP4-BftEiKb241Q ( @The Outlaw Ocean Project ) Watch the interview on YouTube #theoutlawocean #ianurbina #seeksustainablejapan #interview #journalist #author #oceans 00:00 OutlawOcean Trailer 01:14 Why the Outlaw Ocean 03:20 Find Wider Audience 05:00 Art & Music to grab emotion 08:00 Noam Chomsky Music 10:10 Can't Ignore 2/3 of Planet 13:00 Overfishing & Carbon Capture 14:14 Seabed Mining 17:00 Short-term Profit Influence 20:00 Fishmeal is illogical 26:00 Gambia Loss of Food + Livelihood 30:30 Foreign Capital Good vs Bad 34:00 Palau conservation 38:00 Ocean Mapping Resistance 41:00 Free Seas Commons 42:00 Journalistic Morale Tips 44:00 The Human Connection 45:00 Humanize Bad Actors Too 47:00 Points of Progress 49:00 Human Rights & Climate Connect 50:00 NBC Ghost Boats 53:00 Global Fishing Watch 55:00 Chinese Illegal Fishing Boats 57:00 About the Outlaw Ocean Project The Outlaw Ocean Project & LINKS to information we discussed: The Outlaw Ocean Project https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCykiIhv2wP4-BftEiKb241Q ( @The Outlaw Ocean Project ) Outlaw Ocean Official Website: https://www.theoutlawocean.com/ (https://www.theoutlawocean.com/) Making Music from Journalism: https://www.theoutlawoceanmusic.com/ (https://www.theoutlawoceanmusic.com/) Buy the Book in English, Japanese and many other languages: https://www.theoutlawocean.com/the-book (https://www.theoutlawocean.com/the-book) Substack newsletter: https://theoutlawocean.substack.com (https://theoutlawocean.substack.com) Trailer for the Outlaw Oceans via https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCieB62vq-5QByMIcq-LMntg ( @PARLEYCHANNEL ) : https://youtu.be/3pjr-5ivTCo (https://youtu.be/3pjr-5ivTCo) Noam Chomsky Music Project- Destroying the Commons: https://youtu.be/9b7fVMlQICs (https://youtu.be/9b7fVMlQICs) North Korean Ghost Boats on Japan's Coast NBC https://www.nbcnews.com/specials/china-illegal-fishing-fleet/ (https://www.nbcnews.com/specials/china-illegal-fishing-fleet/) Global Fishing Watch Organization: https://globalfishingwatch.org/ (https://globalfishingwatch.org/) "There are few remaining frontiers on our planet. But perhaps the wildest, and least understood, are the world's oceans: too big to police, and under no clear international authority, these immense regions of treacherous water play host to rampant criminality and exploitation." https://www.theoutlawocean.com/the-book/ (https://www.theoutlawocean.com/the-book/)== About JJWalsh - InboundAmbassador - Seek Sustainable Japan Talkshow-Podcast == Seek Sustainable Japan is a talkshow and podcast interview series hosted by JJWalsh an American expat long-time Hiroshima, Japan based educator, content creator and entrepreneur. Official Website: https://www.inboundambassador.com/ (https://www.inboundambassador.com/) #seeksustainablejapan ~~~ Listen to the SeekingSustainability LIVE Talkshow on Podcast [AUDIO] http://www.inboundambassador.com/ssl-podcasts/ (http://www.inboundambassador.com/ssl-podcasts/) ALL Talks in Seek Sustainable Japan (April 2020~) https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcyYXjRuE20GsvS0rEOgSiQVAyKbEFSRP (https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcyYXjRuE20GsvS0rEOgSiQVAyKbEFSRP) JJWalsh Official InboundAmbassador Website: https://www.inboundambassador.com/ (https://www.inboundambassador.com/) Please join, become a monthly sponsor or a 1-time donation supporter on YouTube / Patreon / BuyMeACoffee / or KoFi - every little bit helps keep Seek Sustainable Japan going, thank you! All Links: https://linktr.ee/jjwalsh...
There are few remaining frontiers on our planet. But perhaps the wildest, and least understood, are the world's oceans: too big to police, and under no clear international authority, these immense regions of treacherous water play host to rampant criminality and exploitation. Join us for a conversation with Ian Urbana, director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, a nonprofit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C., that focuses on environmental and human rights concerns at sea globally. MLF ORGANIZER Andrew Dudley NOTES MLF: People & Nature SPEAKERS Ian Urbina Director, The Outlaw Ocean Project Andrew Dudley Co-Host and Producer, Earth Live; Chair, People & Nature Member-Led Forum, The Commonwealth Club of California—Moderator In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are currently hosting all of our live programming via YouTube live stream. This program was recorded via video conference on February 1st, 2022 by the Commonwealth Club of California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are few remaining frontiers on our planet. But perhaps the wildest, and least understood, are the world's oceans: too big to police, and under no clear international authority, these immense regions of treacherous water play host to rampant criminality and exploitation. Join us for a conversation with Ian Urbana, director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, a nonprofit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C., that focuses on environmental and human rights concerns at sea globally. MLF ORGANIZER Andrew Dudley NOTES MLF: People & Nature SPEAKERS Ian Urbina Director, The Outlaw Ocean Project Andrew Dudley Co-Host and Producer, Earth Live; Chair, People & Nature Member-Led Forum, The Commonwealth Club of California—Moderator In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are currently hosting all of our live programming via YouTube live stream. This program was recorded via video conference on February 1st, 2022 by the Commonwealth Club of California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Weekly 30-min chat with Sustainability-focused consultants in Japan Tove Kinooka & JJWalsh & this week, we are joined by James Hollow. About Tove: Tove Kinooka is a Yokohama/Tokyo-based sustainability consultant who co-founded Global Perspectives: "Creating sustainability driven organizations and leaders to deliver financial, social and environmental sustainability for all your stakeholders" http://www.globalperspectives.biz/ (http://www.globalperspectives.biz/) Tove's Links today: * TimeOut Tokyo: https://www.timeout.com/tokyo/news/starbucks-opens-its-first-greener-store-in-japan-at-the-tokyo-imperial-palace-113021?fbclid=IwAR2_AxmtrR5OX5hdlTJNy_XgCxcOF_pYUSm5O_YGeQtu7XEIlhUXASazQM0 * Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2021/05/overselling-sustainability-reporting * Book: Entangled Life - How fungi make our worlds, change our minds and shape our futures (Merlin Sheldrake). https://www.amazon.co.uk/Entangled-Life-Worlds-Change-Futures/dp/1847925197 #entangledlife #greenstarbucks https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCWo4IA01TXzBeGJJKWHOG9g ( @Harvard Business Review ) #oversellingsustainabilityreporting About James: James Hollow is the Founder/CEO of FABRIC KK based in Tokyo - a strategy design focused consultancy helping businesses transition to a better balance for the needs of people, and planet in addition to profits in Japan, Asia and the Global Markets. https://fbrc.co/ (https://fbrc.co/) JJ's Interview with James on Seeking Sustainability Live Talkshow (Seek Sustainable Japan from 2022~) https://youtu.be/AxrT7d05WIk (https://youtu.be/AxrT7d05WIk) Jame's Links today: * The Hidden Half of Nature https://www.amazon.co.jp/-/en/David-R-Montgomery/dp/0393244407 * Fossil Free Media Projects https://fossilfree.media/projects/ #fossilfreemedia #thehiddenhalfofnature About Joy: Joy Jarman-Walsh (JJWalsh) is a Hiroshima-based sustainability-focused consultant & content creator who hosts the weekly "Seeking Sustainability LIVE in Japan" talkshow and podcast - interviews with "Good People doing Great Things to keep People-Planet-Profit in balance." https://www.inboundambassador.com (http://www.inboundambassador.com) Joy's links today: * Hiroshima gets MUJI flagship sustainable lifestyle store in spring 2022: https://gethiroshima.com/news/new-muji-flagship-store-coming-to-hiroshima/ * The Outlaw Ocean Project & Book & Music & upcoming SSJ interview with author/jounalist/founder of the Outlaw Ocean Project Ian Urbina https://www.theoutlawocean.com/ Available in Japanese as well as many other languages: https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4560098379 https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCykiIhv2wP4-BftEiKb241Q ( @The Outlaw Ocean Project ) #theoutlawoceanproject #muji #hiroshima Upcoming Seek Sustainable Japan talks: + 1/20 9am with Japan Times writer Alex KT Martin about the disappearance and mysterious stories of Japan's Wolf + 1/21 9am with founder of Inside Japan Tours Rob Moran about the more sustainable travel options they promote around Japan #SustainableShortTakes with a #Japan focus as a sub-series of the #SeekSustainableJapan talkshow and podcast series (previously called #SeekingSustainabilityLive in Japan 2020-2021) JJWalsh is a sustainability-focused content creator who founded InboundAmbassador to help entrepreneurs & SME's promote the value of sustainability in their brand. She hosts Seeking Sustainability in Japan LIVE to support "good people doing great things" in Japan. Like what you hear? Support JJ's work on https://www.patreon.com/jjwalsh (Patreon) /https://www.buymeacoffee.com/jjwalsh ( BuyMeACoffee) / https://ko-fi.com/jjwalsh (KoFi) / https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbjRdeieOLGes008y_I9y5Q (YouTube) - https://linktr.ee/jjwalsh (All LINKS updated here on LinkTree) JJWalsh - InboundAmbassador Website http://www.inboundambassador.com/ (http://www.inboundambassador.com) --------------- Music by Hana Victoria Music rights...
We welcome back Ian Urbina who was on Rising Tide's first episode. The former NY Times reporter's Outlaw Ocean series became a bestselling book and now The Outlaw Ocean Project. We discuss his latest reporting for the New Yorker magazine on how thousands of climate refugees from Africa seeking to cross the Mediterranean are being seized by Libyan Militias who also kidnapped and beat Ian while he was working on this story. We'll also talk about lack of law enforcement at sea, the link between music and journalism and more. Rising Tide, the Ocean Podcast is co-hosted by Blue Frontier's David Helvarg and the Inland Ocean Coalition's Vicki Nichols-Goldstein. This podcast aims to give you information, inspiration and motivation (along with a few laughs) to help understand our ocean world and make it better. The ocean is rising, and so are we!Learn more at bluefront.org
Herkansing voor Libië op democratieNa een lange burgeroorlog mogen mensen in Libië eind deze maand weer naar de stembussen om een nieuwe president te kiezen. Maar op de kieslijst staan een aantal opmerkelijke figuren, onder andere de zoon van de voormalige dictator Qadhafi en een omstreden generaal doen mee aan de verkiezingen. En de VN-gezant die de verkiezingen zou overzien heeft ook nog eens tot overmaat van ramp ontslag genomen. Emeritus professor en Libië-kenner Jan Michiel Otto is te gast over deze opmerkelijk verkiezingen."De EU financiert Libische martelkamers voor migranten"Migranten uit Afrika worden al ver buiten de Europese kust gedetecteerd en teruggestuurd naar Libië. Daar komen zij terecht in een geheime detentiecentra waar gewapende milities hen mishandelen en afpersen. Dit systeem wordt in stand gehouden dankzij financiering door de Europese Unie, zegt de Amerikaanse journalist Ian Urbina van het Outlaw Ocean Project. Hij reisde naar de Libische hoofdstad Tripoli en kwam terug met uniek materiaal van de pushbacks op zee, beelden vanuit de gevangenis en getuigenissen van voormalige gevangenen. Verslaggever Edwin Koopman sprak met hem.
Migranten uit Afrika worden al ver buiten de Europese kust gedetecteerd en teruggestuurd naar Libië. Daar komen zij terecht in een geheime detentiecentra waar gewapende milities hen mishandelen en afpersen. Dit systeem wordt in stand gehouden dankzij financiering door de Europese Unie, zegt de Amerikaanse journalist Ian Urbina van het Outlaw Ocean Project. Hij reisde naar de Libische hoofdstad Tripoli en kwam terug met uniek materiaal van de pushbacks op zee, beelden vanuit de gevangenis en getuigenissen van voormalige gevangenen. Verslaggever Edwin Koopman sprak met hem.
Herkansing voor Libië op democratieNa een lange burgeroorlog mogen mensen in Libië eind deze maand weer naar de stembussen om een nieuwe president te kiezen. Maar op de kieslijst staan een aantal opmerkelijke figuren, onder andere de zoon van de voormalige dictator Qadhafi en een omstreden generaal doen mee aan de verkiezingen. En de VN-gezant die de verkiezingen zou overzien heeft ook nog eens tot overmaat van ramp ontslag genomen. Emeritus professor en Libië-kenner Jan Michiel Otto is te gast over deze opmerkelijk verkiezingen."De EU financiert Libische martelkamers voor migranten"Migranten uit Afrika worden al ver buiten de Europese kust gedetecteerd en teruggestuurd naar Libië. Daar komen zij terecht in een geheime detentiecentra waar gewapende milities hen mishandelen en afpersen. Dit systeem wordt in stand gehouden dankzij financiering door de Europese Unie, zegt de Amerikaanse journalist Ian Urbina van het Outlaw Ocean Project. Hij reisde naar de Libische hoofdstad Tripoli en kwam terug met uniek materiaal van de pushbacks op zee, beelden vanuit de gevangenis en getuigenissen van voormalige gevangenen. Verslaggever Edwin Koopman sprak met hem.
As Ian Urbina's investigative work uncovered human rights abuses and climate destruction across the world's oceans, he realized he needed to diversify his audience—beyond even the reach of legacy outlets like the New York Times. On this week's Kicker, Urbina and Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, discuss this week's story on Libya's migrant prisons, and the journalism model Urbina built to change the rules of global engagement.
Our third episode of Tribe Chat, hosted by The Butcher Brotherz takes a look at the medium of journalism, and how a story can be told not only through words, but reinterpreted through music with Ian Urbina, the former chief editor of The NY Times, and owner/operator of The Outlaw Ocean Project. We are especially excited to share his projects most recent piece that covers Captivity and Crimes Against Humanity in Libya, which includes a harrowing story from those involved while on location covering the issue. Additionally, we got into the projects other stories to include Outlaw Ocean, how and why it was decided to fuse investigative journalism and music together, and where their direction hopes to land them next!Check out the Article in The New Yorker:https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/12/06/the-secretive-libyan-prisons-that-keep-migrants-out-of-europeVisit and Support The Outlaw Ocean Project:https://www.theoutlawocean.com/investigations/the-secretive-libyan-prisons-that-keep-migrants-out-of-europeSupport the show (https://paypal.me/WarpaintRecords)
¿Son los océanos como el salvaje oeste? ¿Qué nuevos piratas y criminales deambulan por sus aguas? ¿Por qué es difícil hacer cumplir las leyes marítimas? ¿Es España un foco de pesca furtiva? En el Día Mundial de los Océanos recibimos al periodista e investigador norteamericano, Ian Urbina autor de “Océanos sin ley. Viajes a través de la última frontera salvaje”, una profunda investigación sobre el universo humano y salvaje que albergan los océanos y la impunidad con la que actúan esclavistas, pescadores ilegales, mercenarios o buques que vierten petróleo. Ganador de un premio Pulitzer y un Polk, Urbina es director del proyecto “The Outlaw Ocean Project”, una entidad periodística sin ánimo de lucro que trabaja para dar visibilidad a delitos contra los derechos humanos y el medio ambiente que se producen en los mares de todo el planeta. Y del viaje por los océanos, al sonido veraniego y refrescante que nos traen desde el sur de nuestro país los chicos de Vera Fauna. Una revelación en este año pandémico en el que uno de sus temas se convirtió en himno de la cuarentena con un disco en esa casa en la que estar y desde la que cantar a la vida. Son una mezcla única de pop luminoso, sicodelia playera, tropicalismo y andalucismo, costumbrismo y de crítica.
Links1. “Fish Farming is Feeding the Globe. What's the Cost for Locals?” by Ian Urbina, The New Yorker, March 1, 2021.2. The Outlaw Ocean Project website.3. Sea Control 225: IUU Fishing and the Evolution of the Sea Shepherd with Dr. Claude Berube, CIMSEC, January 31, 2021.4. Sea Control 218: Coastal Insecurity, Ansar Al-Sunnah, and Women in Maritime Security with Kelly Moss and Lexie van Buskirk, CIMSEC, December 20, 2020.5. Sea Control 219: USCG Commandant Admiral Karl Schultz, CIMSEC, December 27, 2020.6. The Outlaw Ocean: Journeys Across the Last Untamed Frontier, Ian Urbina, Penguin Books, 2020.
This episode was recorded as part of our monthly, live Sentient Sessions series. Watch the recording on our YouTube. Meet the Speakers:Ian Urbina, Investigative Reporter, Pulitzer Prize winner, and Director of The Outlaw Ocean ProjectThe Outlaw Ocean Project is a non-profit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C., that focuses on reporting about environmental and human rights crimes at sea.Ian is also author of The Outlaw Ocean series was originally published in The New York Times, where Ian Urbina (See: Wikipedia) has been an investigative reporter for over two decades. Several of his stories have been adapted into major feature films, including The Outlaw Ocean which was purchased by Netflix and Leonardo DiCaprio.During his career, Ian has won a Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News, a George Polk Award for Foreign Reporting, and his work has been nominated for an Emmy Award. He has degrees in history and cultural anthropology from Georgetown University and the University of Chicago. Before joining The Times, he was a Fulbright Fellow in Cuba and he also wrote about the Middle East and Africa for various outlets including the Los Angeles Times, Harper's and Vanity Fair. He lives in Washington D.C. with his family.The Outlaw Ocean reporting, almost all done offshore, took Ian across 5 seas and 14 countries in Africa, Asia, the Mediterranean, South America, and the Middle East. It resulted in 8 front-page stories in The New York Times and a book published by Knopf Doubleday. While reporting for the book, Ian was joined by an award-winning photographer from Brazil named Fábio Nascimento.Lex Rigby, Head of Investigations at Viva!After more than a decade campaigning to defend, conserve and protect marine wildlife, Lex joined the vegan campaigning charity Viva! in 2018.As Head of Investigations, Lex is responsible for coordinating, conducting, and delivering key investigations to support Viva!'s ground-breaking campaigns.Her investigations have been covered in the press many times:Three illegal fishing trawlers arrested following night raidCaptain deliberately sank illegal fishing vesselImagine living in a cage filled with millions of tiny parasitic sea liceWith Sea Shepherd she participated in three whale defence campaigns in Antarctica and four anti-poaching campaigns from the Southern Ocean to the North Sea, including Operation Icefish (which Ian Urbina wrote about in the New York Times).Pete Paxton, Undercover InvestigatorPete Paxton has been doing animal cruelty investigations since 2001, uncovering abuse at puppy mills, factory farms, slaughterhouses, commercial fishing boats, and pet stores. He has worked in the US, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, India, and Philippines, finding and training investigators in several countries.His work has been covered in the HBO documentaries Dealing Dogs and Death on a Factory Farm, and the Nat Geo documentary Animal Undercover. He is the author of Rescue Dogs, and has been awarded a Coin of Excellence from the US Attorney's Office of Arkansas for his role as an undercover investigator to help shut down a seller of dogs and cats to research labs.Much of Pete's work has involved working undercover for weeks or months as facilities, enabling Pete to understand the plight of undocumented immigrants exploited in agriculture, and the factors amongst all commercial animal operations that lead to predictable criminal behavior.About Sentient MediaAll proceeds from this event go directly into funding Sentient Media.Sentient Media is a nonprofit media organization that produces independent reporting on farmed animal lives and our broken food system.Our mission is to increase public awareness of key issues that matter to all of us: the treatment and well-being of all sentient beings and the health of our planet.We believe exposure is the first step toward behavioral change. That's why we bring together journalists, digital marketing, and tech expertise to reach a diverse audience.In 2020, our animal-related content reached over 1 million readers, with over 25 million first page impressions on Google, 250 articles published on Sentient Media and 72 articles placed in outside media including The Guardian, USA Today, WIRED, NY Daily News, Citizen Truth, The Times, and more.Newsletter: https://sentientmedia.org/newsletter Facebook: https://facebook.com/sentientmediaorg Twitter: https://twitter.com/sentient_media Instagram: https://instagram.com/sentient_media LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/sent...
In this final episode of season 9, Ian Urbina shares his experiences as an award-winning investigative reporter and founder of The Outlaw Ocean Project, a nonprofit journalism outlet sharing stories of lawlessness at sea from around the world. We talk about Ian's decision to launch The Outlaw Ocean Project and the innovative storytelling that has followed through the Outlaw Ocean Music Project. This episode also recognizes Ian as the 2020 McGill Lecturer in honor of the late editor Ralph McGill and in celebration of journalistic courage, which Ian addresses in the episode.
Piracy. Gunrunning. Human trafficking. The harvest of endangered animals. Vigilantes pursuing justice. All happening in a world most of us know nothing about: the open ocean. This week, I sat down with Ian Urbina for an episode unique in the ManTalks canon. It’s my belief that cultivating or embodying the healthy masculine (or feminine) has to involve both inner and outer work, and a big part of outer work is being aware of what’s happening in--or happening to--the world. Ian’s expertise, passion, and concern for this darker corner of human life was readily apparent to me. It was an honor to talk to him. Ian Urbina, a former investigative reporter for the New York Times, is the director of The Outlaw Ocean Project, a non-profit journalism organization based in Washington, D.C., that focuses on reporting about environmental and human rights crimes at sea. Listen in to hear about what it was like to chase one of INTERPOL’s most wanted ships, how “labor brokers” kidnap men (and boys) to work on ships, and how shame and pride perpetuate the dangers present on the high seas. Share your takeaways with me! Leave a rating or review, or hit me up on Insta @mantalks Connect with Ian Website: https://www.theoutlawocean.com Facebook: @ianurbinareporter Instagram: @ian_urbina Are you looking to find your purpose, navigate transition or fix your relationships, all with a powerful group of men from around the world? Check out The Alliance and join me today. Check out our Facebook Page or the Men's community. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify For more episodes visit us at ManTalks.com | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter Did you enjoy the podcast? If so please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. It helps our podcast get into the ears of new listeners, which expands the ManTalks Community Editing & Mixing by: Aaron The Tech See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.