Results 231 to 240 of about 75,176 (280)
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Green Criminology, Culture, and Cinema

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   +1 more source

Earth–world–planet: Rural ecologies of horror and dark green criminology

Theoretical criminology, 2020
This article responds to green criminology. Drawing on an ethnographic case study of the coal-producing region of Appalachia and the processes of mountaintop removal mining, the article engages contemporary philosophy, ecocriticism, and “dark ecology” to
B. McClanahan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Introduction to a Southern Green Criminology

Southern Green Criminology: A Science to End Ecological Discrimination, 2019
In this first chapter, I present green criminology as a project based on three pillars and characterised by two traits. I explain how one cultural model and one economic theory have inspired most green criminology undertakings.
David Rodríguez Goyes
semanticscholar   +1 more source

„Green criminology” – a question about transnational environmental crime in Poland

Studia Prawnoustrojowe
The purpose of this article is to introduce the achievements of green criminology in the context of combating transnational environmental crime. In addition, the Polish scientific contribution to the development of this new sub-discipline of criminology ...
J. Banach-Gutierrez   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Green Cultural Criminology: Foundations, Variations and New Frames

Green cultural criminology (GCC) is a hybridized, interdisciplinary approach, drawing upon general propositions associated with green criminology and cultural criminology. Whereas green criminology is concerned with crimes and harms affecting the natural environment and the planet, including their associated impacts on human and nonhuman life, cultural
Anita Lam, Nigel South, Avi Brisman
openaire   +1 more source

‘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
openaire   +1 more source

Rural Criminology: Research, Trends and Future Directions

Internal Security
This article provides a comprehensive overview of rural criminology as a dynamic and evolving subfield within the broader discipline of criminology. It traces the historical marginalisation of research into rural crime, and it highlights the growing ...
Joseph Donnermeyer
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Noise, artificial light and odour. Applying green and cultural criminology to the acoustic-sensory echoes of urban spaces

2020
Este artículo, bajo el prisma de la criminología verde y la criminología cultural, analiza diversos aspectos del ruido en los espacios urbanos y subraya la convergencia sensitiva entre fenómenos ruidosos, odoríferos y lumínicos, como parte del enfoque de una criminología sensorial emergente “visual, olfativa y auditiva” y del estudio de los usos y ...
García Ruiz, Ascensión   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Propagandizing the visible, ignoring the invisible-visible

Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal
We draw from green cultural and visual criminology to analyze and discuss how the visual is manufactured to promote space expansionism in terms of the idyllic, simultaneously obscuring the visible (i.e.
D. Rothe, Victoria E. Collins
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Criminalización de la Tradición: Exclusión de Productores Mezcaleros Mexiquenses y Justicia Ambiental desde la Criminología Verde

Ibero Ciencias - Revista Científica y Académica - ISSN 3072-7197
This article explores the systematic exclusion of traditional mezcal producers in Mexico under current certification regimes, official standards, and global market demands, from a critical green criminology perspective.
Eduardo Sánchez Jiménez   +1 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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