Results 201 to 210 of about 1,072 (235)

Toward a Green-Cultural Criminology of “the Rural”

open access: yesCritical Criminology, 2014
There 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:
Avi Brisman   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Perceiving and Communicating Environmental Contamination and Change: Towards a Green Cultural Criminology with Images

open access: yesCritical Criminology, 2017
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
Lorenzo Natali   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Tangled up in green: Cultural criminology and green criminology

open access: yes, 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
exaly   +3 more sources

Green Cultural Criminology

open access: yes, 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
openaire   +2 more sources

Green Criminology, Culture, and Cinema

open access: yes, 2017
Since first proposed by Brisman and South, green cultural criminology has sought to interrogate human-environment interactions in order to locate meaning. Within the broad framework of green cultural criminology, work has emerged that follows visual criminology in looking to the visual cultural register for insights into the intersections of crime ...
Bill McClanahan   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Toward a green cultural criminology of the South

2020
This chapter begins by reminding readers how green cultural criminology—a cross-fertilisation of green criminology and cultural criminology—has attempted to: (1) examine the way(s) in which environmental crimes, harms, and disasters are constructed and represented by the news media and in popular cultural forms; (2) highlight and analyse patterns of ...
Avi Brisman, Nigel South
exaly   +2 more sources

Green cultural criminology

open access: yes, 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   +2 more sources

‘To Preserve and Promote’: Gendering Harm in Green Cultural Criminology

2023
This chapter explores how gendered representations of resource development affect individual and collective behaviour and how these characterisations shape attitudes and policies. Taking a cultural criminological approach, I turn attention to how narratives of frontier masculinity uphold the oil and gas industry in the province of Alberta – the oil and
exaly   +2 more sources

Stories of Environmental Crime, Harm and Protection: Narrative Criminology and Green Cultural Criminology

2019
Abstract This chapter draws on previous work calling for a narrative criminology sensitive to fictional stories about how we have instigated or sustained harmful action with respect to the environment. It begins by offering some defining features of narrative criminology, before turning to two examples of narrative criminological work
exaly   +2 more sources

Conveying environmental harms through music: Some directions for green-cultural criminology

open access: yes
This chapter contributes to the perspective of green-cultural criminology, which was pioneered by Nigel South and Avi Brisman with an agenda-setting article and a book published ten years ago (Brisman and South, 2013, 2014). Drawing on our previous work in Italy on the criminalised NoTap eco-justice movement and the environmental disaster of Casale ...
Di Ronco A, Natali L
openaire   +4 more sources

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