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This edited collection brings together internationally renowned scholars to explore green criminology through the interdisciplinary lenses of power, harm and justice. The chapters provide innovative case study analyses from around the world that seek to advance theoretical, policy and practice discourses about environmental harm.
"The collection edited by Walters, Westerhuis and Wyatt contains some excellent theoretical essays on the nature of environmental crime and harm, on the role of global capitalism as a major offender, case studies of the management or lack thereof of e-waste disposal, wildlife trafficking, carbon trading fraud, chemical pollution. There are some highly relevant discussions concerning the dynamics of regulation and enforcement including the role of international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and victims organizations. For those seeking an introduction to the general themes and
scope of green criminology, this collection serves as an excellent introduction." - British Journal of Criminology
"Emerging Issues in Green Criminology is an important collection of work that helps move the discussion of green criminology toward fuller recognition of the role power plays in the construction of green crime, their commissions, and the legal and nonlegal responses to those crimes and harms. The result is a work that will become the foundation for expanding the theoretical
analysis of power within green criminology, and making power analysis central to green criminological analysis."
"What a pleasure to read Emerging Issues in Green Criminology! The editors and authors are to be congratulated for having skillfully woven together twelve otherwise quite disparate chapters into a common project concerned with power, justice and harm. This book confirms that green criminology is vibrant, relevant and here to stay.'
Auteur
Lieselot Bisschop, University College Ghent, Belgium Avi Brisman, Eastern Kentucky University, USA Matthew Hall, University of Sheffield, UK M.H.A Kluin, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands Olga Knight, University of Colorado, Denver, USA. Peter Martin, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Hanneke Mol PhD candidate studying for a joint degree at the University of Kent, UK and Utrecht University, Netherlands Angus Nurse, Birmingham City University, UK Ragnhild Sollund, University of Oslo, Norway Nigel South, University of Essex, UK Paul B. Stretesky, University of Colorado, Denver, USA Gudrun Vande Walle, University College Ghent, Belgium Rob White, University of Tasmania, Australia
Contenu
Introduction; Diane Solomon Westerhuis, Reece Walters and Tanya Wyatt PART I: CONCEPTS, PERSPECTIVES AND DIMENSIONS 1. The Conceptual Contours of Green Criminology; Rob White 2. Environmental Victimization and Conflict Resolution: A Case Study of E-waste; Lieselot Bisschop and Gudrun Vande Walle PART II: RIGHTS AND WRONGS 3. Resource Wealth, Power, Crime and Conflict; Avi Brisman and Nigel South 4. Animal Trafficking and Trade: Animal Abuse and Species Injustice; Ragnhild Sollund 5. Crime and the Commodification of Carbon; Reece Walters and Peter Martin 6.The Local Context of Transnational Wildlife Trafficking: the Heathrow Animal Reception Centre; Tanya Wyatt PART III: POLICING, REGULATION AND ENFORCEMENT 7. Shoot Horses Don't They? Policing Wildlife, Perspectives on Criminality in Wildlife Crime; Angus Nurse 8. Environmental Regulation in Chemical Corporations: Preliminary Results of a Case Study Research Environmental Regulation in Chemical Corporations: Preliminary Results of a Case Study Research; M.H.A. Kluin 9. The Uneven Geography of Environmental Enforcement INGOs: National Influence of Wealth on a Global Civil Society and Potential Implications for Ecological Disorganization; Paul B. Stretesky and Olga Knight 10. A Harm Analysis of Environmental Crime; Diane Solomon Westerhuis 11. Victims of Environmental Harms and their Role in National and International justice; Matthew Hall 12. 'A Gift from the Tropics to the World': Power, Harm, and Palm Oil; Hanneke Mol