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Shipbreakers
Content:Documentary Film
Available From:Cinema Guild
Review Available:Review
Media Type:DVD
Release Date:2004
Audience:Higher Education
Secondary Education
Running Time:42 minutes
Physical Description:(Null)
Language:English
Author:Michael Kot
Resource Library Number:SADVD 09
Subject:Description and Travel
Economics and Business
Science, Technology, & the Environment
Subheading:Industry
Pollution
Technology & Modernization
Transportation
Region:South Asia
Country:India



Abstract:

Welcome to Alang, India, the site of a gargantuan scrap yard where oceangoing ships come to die. Forty thousand Indians live and work here, dismembering and scavenging the hulks of 400 vessels every year. Shipbreakers is an extraordinary documentary that chronicles the lives of the people who work here, from the men who take apart these giant ships with their bare hands to the bosses, who ignore environmental and health concerns for fear of losing the business to other developing nations. It may be the world's most dangerous job. One worker a day, on average, dies on the job, evaporated in explosions, crushed by falling steel, cut in half by cables or broken up from falls. Of the remainder, one in four will contract cancers caused by asbestos, PCBs and other toxic substances. Vividly capturing both the haunting beauty of the ships and the deplorable conditions of the workers, Shipbreakers is an international story of greed, survival, Third World labor, and environmental neglect.




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