Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/25756
Title: The Docks
Authors: Sharpsteen, Bill
Keywords: Port of Los Angeles
Labor
Environmental
Security issues
The Docks
Issue Date: 2011
Publisher: University of California Press
Abstract: The Docks is an eye-opening journey into a giant madhouse of activity that few outsiders ever see: the Port of Los Angeles. In a book woven throughout with riveting novelist detail and illustrated with photographs that capture the frenetic energy of the place, Bill Sharpsteen tells the story of the people who have made this port, the largest in the country, one of the nation's most vital economic enterprises. Among others, we meet a pilot who parks ships, one of the first women longshoremen, union officials and employers at odds over almost everything, an environmental activist fighting air pollution in the "diesel death zone," and those with the nearly impossible job of enforcing security. Together these stories paint a compelling picture of a critical entryway for goods coming into the country--the Port of Los Angeles is part of a complex that brings in 40% of all our waterborne cargo and 70% of all Asian imports--yet one that is also extremely vulnerable. The Docks is a rare look at a world within our world in which we find a microcosm of the labor, environmental, and security issues we collectively face.
URI: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/25756
ISBN: 0520261933
9780520261938
Appears in Collections:Sociology

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