Langbeschreibung
Widespread and significant forms of harm such as green or environmental harm have generally been overlooked by criminologists. This book argues that green harm needs to become a key area of study within the discipline of criminology and considers how the discipline can be redesigned. The authors propose an environmental frame of reference which can be addressed from within criminology and which enables criminologists and environmentalists to respond and react differently to environmental crime.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1 Toward a Green Criminological Revolution; Chapter 2 Defining the Parameters of the Problem; Chapter 3 Science and a Green Frame of Reference; Chapter 4; Chapter 5 Green Victimology; Chapter 6 Green Behaviorism; Chapter 7 The Life Course Trajectories of Chemical Pollutants; Chapter 8 Green Criminology and the Treadmill of Production; Chapter 9 A Green Criminological Approach to Social Disorganization; Chapter 10 The End of Crime, or the End of Old-fashioned Criminology?;