Shark tourism sits at the intersection of awe, fear, economics, ethics, and responsibility. Every year, millions of people enter the ocean seeking encounters with sharks—some for thrill, some for understanding, some for conservation. But as tourism expands, one question becomes unavoidable: are humans interacting with sharks responsibly, or simply consuming them in a new way? Shark Tourism, Safety & Human Interaction is the final volume in Madeline Stann’s nine-book nonfiction shark series. Drawing on science, psychology, conservation ethics, tourism policy, and real-world practice, this book examines how humans interact with sharks—and how those interactions shape safety, behavior, ecosystems, and public perception. This book moves beyond fear-based narratives and sensational headlines to explore what actually creates risk in the ocean. It explains why shark encounters are often misunderstood, how media and social platforms normalize dangerous behavior, and why human choices—not sharks—are the most influential factor in safety outcomes. Readers will explore: How shark tourism evolved and where it goes wrong - Why fear and fascination drive risky human behavior - The real causes behind shark incidents - The ethics of cage diving, free diving, feeding, and crowding - How tourism can support conservation—or quietly undermine it - What responsible coexistence actually looks like in practice This is not a book arguing against shark tourism. It is a book demanding that it grow up. For divers, conservationists, operators, educators, policymakers, and ocean lovers, this book offers a clear, grounded framework for interacting with sharks without exploiting them—and for protecting the future of both sharks and the people who seek them.