This first volume in green criminology devoted to gender investigates gendered patterns to offending, victimisation and environmental harms. It includes feminist and intersectional analysis, and original case studies from the Global North and Global South. The book also examines actions that have been taken in response to gendered crimes and harms, together with insights on the gendered nature of resistance.
The collection advances debate on green crimes, environmental harm and climate change, and will inspire students and researchers to foreground gender in debates about reducing and transforming the challenges affecting our planets future.
Recenzijas
This is a path-breaking and much overdue addition to green criminology. Highly recommended. Choice
1. Why Gendering Green Criminology Matters - Emma Milne, Pamela Davies,
James Heydon, Kay Peggs, and Tanya Wyatt
Part 1: Gendered Nature of Green Crimes and Environmental Harm
2. Eco-feminism and the Gendering Green Criminology Project - Pamela Davies
3. New Directions Please! Veganising Green Criminology - Kay Peggs
4. Men and the Climate Crisis: Why Masculinities Matter for Green Criminology
- Stephen R. Burrell
5. Reconceptualising Gendered Dimensions of Illegal Wildlife Trade in
Sub-Saharan Africa through Legal, Policy and Programmatic Means - Helen U.
Agu, Josiah C. Ogbuka and Meredith L. Gore
6. The Attitudes of People withDifferentGender Identitiesand Different
Perceptions of Gender RolestowardsNonhumanAnimals and Their Welfare -
Aphra Hope-Forest, Ekaterina Gladkova and Tanya Wyatt
Part 2: Gendered Impacts and Victimisation
7. Queering Green Criminology: The Impacts of Zoonotic Diseases on the LGBTQ
Community - Laurence Pedroni and Benja Kromash
8. Women and the Structural Violence of Fast-Fashion Global Production:
Victimisation, Poorcide and Environmental Harms - Sandya Hewamanne and Nigel
South
9. Green Victims of the International Waste Industry: An Analysis from a
Gender Perspective - Marķa-Įngeles Fuentes-Loureiro
10. The Green Road Project and Womens Green Victimisation in Turkey - Halil
Ibrahim Bahar
11. Daughters of Dust: An Eco-Feminist Analysis of Debt-for-Nature Swaps
and Underage Marriage in Indonesia - Delon Alain Omrow
Part 3: Resistance
12. Womens Experiences of Environmental Harm in Colombia: Learning from
Black, Decolonial and Indigenous Communitarian Feminisms - Daniela Suįrez
Vargas and Rachel Killean
13. Vegan Feminism Then and Now: Womens Resistance to Legalised Speciesism
Across Three Waves of Activism - Corey Lee Wrenn and Lynda M. Korimboccus
14. To Preserve and Promote: Gendering Harm in Green Cultural Criminology -
Angeline Marie Letourneau
15. David and Goliath: Exploring the Male Burdens of Patriarchal Capitalism -
Rob White
Emma Milne is Associate Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice at Durham University.
Pamela Davies is a Professor in the Social Sciences Department of Northumbria University.
James Heydon is Assistant Professor of Criminology at the University of Nottingham.
Kay Peggs is Professor of Criminology and Sociology at Kingston University.
Tanya Wyatt is former Professor of Criminology at Northumbria University.