Results 241 to 250 of about 68,822 (269)
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Green Criminology

2014
In recent years, a strand of criminology explicitly concerned with “green” or natural environmental issues has emerged, aiming to place a primary emphasis on the matter of harms and crimes affecting the environment and the planet, and addressing issues such as climate change; natural resource extraction and exploitation; pollution of air, land, and ...
South, N, Brisman, A, Mcclanahan, WW
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Gendering Green Criminology

2023
Our ambition for this book is to bring together feminist and green criminology for the first time in a scholarly volume where all contributions are devoted to the project of gendering green criminology. The editorial team is comprised of experts in gender and crime and in green criminology/environmental harm.
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Against 'Green' Criminology

British Journal of Criminology, 2004
This article offers an overview of recent work on environmental crime and regulation. It demonstrated the majority of such scholarship is imbued by quite problematic ideas concerning how best to envisage the nature of environmental harm and the type of regulatory structures which should be promoted to assist in the amelioration of environmental damage.
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Green Criminology

2012
AbstractGreen criminology addresses forms of crime that harm the environment but are often ignored in criminological research. Green crimes cause both direct and indirect forms of harm, the former of which affect the ecosystem and the latter a consequence of direct harms.
Michael J. Lynch, Paul B. Stretesky
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Green criminologies

2017
‘ What do criminology and criminologists do to decrease the chances of the extinction of mankind and the destruction of the planet? ' (Harding 1983:82) Introduction At the 2003 British Society of Criminology’s conference in Bangor I used the above quotation from Richard Harding when delivering a paper entitled ‘Crime and Genetically Modified Food’. The
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24. Green criminology

2023
Criminology must maintain relevance in a changing world and engage with new challenges. Perhaps pre-eminent among those facing the planet today are threats to the natural environment and, by extension, to human health and rights and to other species. A green criminology has emerged as a (now well-established) criminological perspective that addresses a
Avi Brisman, Nigel South
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Green Cultural Criminology

2014
Over the last two decades, "green criminology" has emerged as a unique area of study, bringing together criminologists and sociologists from a wide range of research backgrounds and varying theoretical orientations. It spans the micro to the macro?from individual-level environmental crimes and victimization to business/corporate violations and state ...
Brisman, A, South, N
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14. Green criminology

2017
Criminology must maintain relevance in a changing world and engage with new challenges. Perhaps pre-eminent among those facing the planet today are threats to the natural environment and, by extension, to human health and rights and to other species. A green criminology has emerged as a (now well established) criminological perspective that addresses a
Avi Brisman, Nigel South
openaire   +1 more source

12. Green criminology

2021
This chapter studies green criminology, a strand of criminology that looks at crimes against the environment, animals, and non-human nature that are largely ignored by mainstream criminology. Green criminology takes a critical approach, looking beyond narrow, human-centred definitions of crime to consider a wider conception which some see as a form of ...
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