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Acknowledgments |
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Introduction: Horizons, issues and relationships in green criminology |
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1 | (24) |
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I History, theory and methods |
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25 | (80) |
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1 A guide to a green criminology |
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27 | (16) |
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2 Reflections on green criminology and its boundaries: Comparing environmental and criminal victimization and considering crime from an eco-city perspective |
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43 | (15) |
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3 The ordinary acts that contribute to ecocide: A criminological analysis |
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58 | (15) |
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4 The contemporary horizon of green criminology |
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73 | (12) |
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5 Innovative approaches to researching environmental crime |
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85 | (20) |
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II International and transnational issues for a green criminology |
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105 | (92) |
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6 Conservation criminology and the "general accident" of climate change |
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107 | (13) |
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7 The criminogenic consequences of climate change: Blurring the boundaries between offenders and victims |
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120 | (14) |
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8 Air crimes and atmospheric justice |
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134 | (16) |
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9 Crude laws: Treadmill of production and state variations in civil and criminal liability for oil discharges in navigable waters |
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150 | (17) |
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10 Food crime: A green criminology perspective |
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167 | (17) |
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11 Nature for rehabilitating offenders and facilitating therapeutic outcomes for youth at risk |
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184 | (13) |
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III Region-specific problems: Some case studies |
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197 | (44) |
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12 The Amazon Rainforest: A green criminological perspective |
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199 | (15) |
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13 The control of conflict minerals in Africa and a preliminary assessment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Act |
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214 | (16) |
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14 Green issues in South-Eastern Europe |
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230 | (11) |
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IV Relationships in green criminology: Environment and economy |
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241 | (60) |
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15 Eco-global criminology and the political economy of environmental harm |
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243 | (18) |
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16 The environment and the crimes of the economy |
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261 | (11) |
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17 Evading responsibility for green harm: State-corporate exploitation of race, class, and gender inequality |
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272 | (10) |
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18 Public perceptions of corporate environmental crime: Assessing the impact of economic insecurity on willingness to impose punishment for pollution |
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282 | (19) |
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V Relationships in green criminology: Humans and non-human species |
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301 | (46) |
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19 Uncovering the significance of and motivation for wildlife trafficking |
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303 | (14) |
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20 The victimization of women, children and non-human species through trafficking and trade: Crimes understood through an ecofeminist perspective |
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317 | (14) |
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21 Environmental justice, animal rights, and total liberation: From conflict and distance to points of common focus |
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331 | (16) |
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VI Relationships in green criminology: Environment and culture |
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347 | (71) |
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22 Tangled up in green: Cultural criminology and green criminology |
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349 | (16) |
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23 "This is the north, where we do what we want": Popular green criminology and "Little Red Riding Hood" films |
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365 | (14) |
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24 Coastline conflict: Implementing environmental law in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil |
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379 | (15) |
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25 Matter all over the place: Litter, criminology and criminal justice |
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394 | (15) |
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26 Conclusion: The planned obsolescence of planet Earth? How green criminology can help us learn from experience and contribute to our future |
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409 | (9) |
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Index |
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418 | |