Is Seafood Sustainability Week actually effective?

Will this event actually make you rethink the kind of fish you consume – or is a threat to seafood enough to inspire change?

Here's another campaign aiming to change what's on our plates.

Here's another campaign aiming to change what's on our plates. Source: Luke Burgess

We address this week by its , but we experience it more joyously as the Festival of Flourishing Fish! The Marine Mardi Gras! Or, maybe, Crab-tember? No. I’ve never been good at naming things, and this last one doesn’t work at all. What can work, my pescatarian chum, is this: .

This week of awareness can work. Even with so many other noble awareness weeks, days and months crammed into the calendar. Even when we suspect that awareness of many kinds might be a little over-poached.

You might suspect this; scholars confirm it. Awareness campaigns can , or even reverse . It’s not laziness that leads us to do little or nothing after we become “aware” of a need for action. It’s our human inclination. We are social and so, we think not just as individuals but as part of a social group. We say to ourselves: well, there’s so much awareness about, somebody must be keeping an eye on things.
fijian-style-sashimi-of-trevally.jpg
Some people might consider this the Festival of Flourishing Fish.
This is why I often miss bin night and write far too few angry letters to my local MP. I unconsciously believe that someone else is aware and is acting when action is needed.

This phenomenon even has a name: the . It permits me to do nothing in so many situations. But, so rarely at the oven. I don’t think I’ve ever unconsciously trusted that my partner would be “aware” of the .

Food is persuasive. We are far more likely, in my unscholarly view, to take action when a good meal is under threat.
Awareness campaigns can prevent change, or even reverse good change already made. It’s not laziness that leads us to do little or nothing after we become “aware” of a need for action. It’s our human inclination.
Tell me that the seas are out of whack, and I might think, “Well, obviously people are aware and cleaning it all up”. Tell me that belly sashimi may one day be a food only served in dreams, and I’m out there. Telling any soul who’ll listen that “dolphin friendly” should not be understood to mean “”, and that the tuna is a troubled species. Yes, it has an unctuous, meaty mouth-feel and a flavour formed to please the fussiest ocean goddess. If you want it again, Helen, remember it is a 'sometimes food'. Remember that you’d better go and .
Our oceans are no longer stuffed with fish, but simply stuffed. Even if this imbalance is of little concern to policymakers and other persons who may prefer to pop fingers in their ears and sing “la la la” than address the fact of a planet whose systems have been strained by industry, it remains one of grave concern to influential palates. Which is to say: people love fish.

Some people love these fruits of the sea so much, they pretend they are vegetables. How often have we seen a professed vegetarian tuck into a baked snapper? One with all its little fish fins and eyes? “I’m vegetarian, but I eat fish,” is a statement that is wrong and one, I imagine, a topic of discussion by snappers.
Sichuan spicy water fish fillet
Do people like fish too much to give up unsustainable choices? (Alan Benson) Source: Alan Benson
This is the transformative power of fish, and of tasty food quite generally. Its promise can persuade us to think and to act as we normally don’t. We can pacify children with an oath of sweets-to-come. Partners, parents and politicians all use food as diplomacy.
Protesters, like Carlo Petrini, have used its soft power to make a point. When a US chain restaurant opened in central Rome, he offered . The placard that declares “Go Home Corporate Burger” just doesn’t have the force of food. This was day one of Slow Food, a movement that continues to exist and continues to raise small crops, not awareness.

Make a change to your menu this week, certainly. Become “aware” of the foods that can be best sustained. But, maybe, think and act as you normally wouldn’t.  Think hard. Is your best fish dish fine enough to unplug the ears of a leader of government or industry? It might be.  Perhaps you can cook for our future, before the future is cooked. 

 

Helen Razer is your frugal food enthusiast, guiding you to the good eats, minus the pretension and price tag in her weekly Friday column, . Don't miss her next instalment, follow her on Twitter . 

Don't miss her next instalment, follow her on Twitter .


 

Binge-watch the entire series of What's The Catch with Matthew Evans:





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4 min read
Published 13 March 2018 3:40pm
Updated 15 March 2018 11:37am
By Helen Razer


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