ABSTRACT Sustainable innovations are increasingly recognized as promising avenues for businesses to tackle global sustainability challenges, expected to deliver ecological, social, and economic benefits. Yet social outcomes at the individual level remain underexplored, raising questions about whether such innovations fully realize their sustainability ...
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Two Decades of Child Welfare System Contact in the Global North: A Research Note on Trends in 44 Countries. [PDF]
Wildeman C +5 more
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News Media Use and Crime Perceptions: The Dual Role of Ideology. [PDF]
Andersson D.
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The Impact of "Ethics Creep" on Research, Teaching and Learning in the Social Sciences and Humanities: A Survey of Canadian Researchers' Experience with Research Ethics Boards. [PDF]
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Trajectories of Concurrent Psychological Distress, Heavy Episodic Drinking and Daily Cigarette Smoking From Adolescence to Midlife: Patterns and Their Sociodemographic Correlates. [PDF]
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One Step Ahead of the Canadian Immigration System: Bureaucratic Chaos and the Development of Migrant Experts Online. [PDF]
Geoffrion K, Guay R.
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A green-cultural criminology: An exploratory outline
Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal, 2013Within the last two decades, “green criminology” has emerged as a distinctive area of study, drawing together criminologists with a wide range of specific research interests and representing varying theoretical orientations. “Green criminology” spans the micro to the macro, from work on individual-level environmental crimes to business/corporate ...
Brisman, Avi, South, Nigel
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Toward a Green-Cultural Criminology of “the Rural”
Critical Criminology, 2014There are many connections between the various strands of critical criminology. Previously, we highlighted common issues between green and cultural criminology, while also noting some of the ways that each perspective could potentially benefit from cross-fertilization (Brisman and South in Crime Media Cult 9(2):115–135, 2013, Green cultural criminology:
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In this article, we will respond to recent calls for a ‘green cultural criminology’ by attempting to open the way for new visual explorations of environmental harms and crimes, and by suggesting some methodological perspectives that can be advanced by the use and analysis of the photographic image. To demonstrate the power, potential and possibility—as
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