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Issues in Green Criminology


Issues in Green Criminology

Hardback by Beirne, Piers; South, Nigel (University of Essex, UK)

Issues in Green Criminology

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£84.99

ISBN:
9781843922209
Publication Date:
1 Jan 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Willan Publishing
Pages:
344 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 29 Apr - 4 May 2024
Issues in Green Criminology

Description

Issues in Green Criminology: confronting harms against environments, humanity and other animals aims to provide, if not a manifesto, then at least a significant resource for thinking about green criminology, a rapidly developing field. It offers a set of specially written introductions and a variety of current and new directions, wide-ranging in scope and international in terms of coverage and contributors. It provides focused discussions of current and cutting edge issues that will influence the emergence of a coherent perspective on green issues. The contributors are drawn from the leading thinkers in the field. The twelve chapters of the book explore the myriad ways in which governments, transnational corporations, military apparatuses and ordinary people going about their everyday lives routinely harm environments, other animals and humanity. The book will be essential reading not only for students taking courses in colleges and universities but also for activists in the environmental and animal rights movements. Its concern is with an ever-expanding agenda - the whys, the hows and the whens of the generation and control of the many aspects of harm to environments, ecological systems and all species of animals, including humans. These harms include, but are not limited to, exploitation, modes of discrimination and disempowerment, degradation, abuse, exclusion, pain, injury, loss and suffering. Straddling and intersecting these many forms of harm are key concepts for a green criminology such as gender inequalities, racism, dominionism and speciesism, classism, the north/south divide, the accountability of science, and the ethics of global capitalist expansion. Green criminology has the potential to provide not only a different way of examining and making sense of various forms of crime and control responses (some well known, others less so) but can also make explicable much wider connections that are not generally well understood. As all societies face up to the need to confront harms against environments, other animals and humanity, criminology will have a major role to play. This book will be an essential part of this process.

Contents

Introduction: Approaching green criminology Part 1: Introduction to Green Criminology 1. Ecology, community and justice: The meaning of green 2. Green criminology and the pursuit of social and ecological justice 3. Animal rights, animal abuse and green criminology Part 2: Animal Rights and Animal Abuse 4. Labelling animals. Non-speciesist criminology and techniques to identify other animals 5. Vivisection: The case for abolition 6. Debating 'animal rights' on-line: The movementcountermovement dialectic Part 3: Ecological Systems and Environmental Harms 7. At risk: Climate change and its bearing on women's vulnerability to male violence 8. Crime, regulation and radioactive waste in the United Kingdom 9. Food crime 10. The 'corporate colonisation of nature': Bio-prospecting, bio-piracy and the development of green criminology 11. Green criminology in the United States 12. Eco-crime and formal and informal law-enforcement in South Africa

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