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Routledge International Handbook of Green Criminology
other
Editor(s):
Avi Brisman
,
Nigel South
Publication date
(Online):
April 14 2020
Publisher:
Routledge
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Journal of Green Building
Author and book information
Book
ISBN (Electronic):
9781315207094
Publication date (Online):
April 14 2020
DOI:
10.4324/9781315207094
SO-VID:
12aab027-594a-4e16-b60e-73f1ff3803e7
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 39
The growth of a field
pp. 52
The ordinary acts that contribute to ecocide
pp. 68
Wildlife crime
pp. 79
Expanding treadmill of production analysis within green criminology by integrating metabolic rift and ecological unequal exchange theories
pp. 95
The visual dimensions of green criminology
pp. 110
Innovative approaches to researching environmental crime
pp. 132
Environmental refugees as environmental victims
pp. 150
How criminologists can help victims of green crimes through scholarship and activism
pp. 167
Climate crimes
pp. 187
Global environmental divides and dislocations
pp. 205
Food crime and green criminology
pp. 222
Monopolising seeds, monopolising society
pp. 239
The War on Drugs and its invisible collateral damage
pp. 260
‘Greening’ injustice
pp. 279
The Amazon Rainforest
pp. 304
Green issues in South-Eastern Europe
pp. 317
The Flint water crisis
pp. 333
Indigenous environmental victimisation in the Canadian oil sands
pp. 348
Fracking the Rockies
pp. 367
Corporate capitalism, environmental damage and the rule of law
pp. 382
Authoritarian environmentalism and environmental regulation enforcement
pp. 403
E-waste in the twilight zone between crime and survival
pp. 421
The environment and the crimes of the economy
pp. 433
Green criminology and the working class
pp. 449
Insurance and climate change
pp. 463
Energy harms
pp. 481
The uncertainty of community financial incentives for ‘fracking’
pp. 497
A violent interspecies relationship
pp. 512
The victimisation of women, children and non-human species through trafficking and trade
pp. 529
Wildlife trafficking and criminogenic asymmetries in a globalised world
pp. 543
Myths of causality, control and coherence in the ‘war on wildlife crime’
pp. 555
Environmental justice, animal rights and total liberation
pp. 573
Environmental justice and the rights of Indigenous peoples
pp. 588
Green crime on the reservation
pp. 607
The disappearing land
pp. 624
Toward a green cultural criminology of the South
pp. 638
Consumed by the crisis
pp. 658
Littering in the Northeast of England
pp. 677
A short conclusion concerning a questionable future
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