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The Encyclopedia of Rural Crime

, 2022
A. Harkness   +43 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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 ...
openaire   +1 more source

Similarities between green criminology and green science: Toward a typology of green criminology

International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, 2011
Green criminology can be described as the study of environmental harm, crime, victimization, law, regulation, and justice.
Michael J. Lynch, Paul B. Stretesky
openaire   +1 more source

Green cultural criminology

2018
This chapter describes some examples of consumption, representation and commodification of nature and related consequences and trends. Green cultural criminology is a new direction in critical criminology—one that, offers many further avenues to pursue, while dovetailing nicely with many of the other critical criminological concerns expressed.
Brisman, Avi, South, Nigel
openaire   +1 more source

Green criminology and green victimization

2015
Green criminology studies crimes with tremendous consequences referred to as green crimes and green harms. Green crimes include a broad array of consequences that flow from human behaviors that damage the environment. Some of these green crimes are legally prohibited by environmental laws and regulations, and may be criminal, regulatory or civil in ...
Melissa L. Jarrell   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Tangled up in green: Cultural criminology and green criminology

2013
The past two decades have seen the development of two new types of criminological analysis: green criminology and cultural criminology. Both remain emergent perspectives, still in the process of sharpening their theoretical and substantive focus – though in the case of cultural criminology at least, this inchoate state is itself valued for its anarchic
openaire   +1 more source

Green Chemistry in the Synthesis of Pharmaceuticals

Chemical Reviews, 2022
Supratik Kar, Hans Sanderson, Kunal Roy
exaly  

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