<i>‘This two volume collection edited by Professor Rob White offers a challenging and insightful flavour of the criminological endeavour to address one of the most prescient challenges of the 21st century: environmental crime. Edited by one of the foremost academics in this field these two volumes do not claim to be exhaustive but as the editor says they do claim to be “interesting, provocative, informative and stimulating”. They are certainly all of these things and more besides. Taken together they lay down an unprecedented challenge to academics, politicians and policy-makers alike to take environmental crime seriously: an essential collection for anyone interested in these issues.’</i>

- Sandra Walklate, Liverpool University, UK and Monash University, Australia,

Environmental crime is arguably the most vital and destructive crime of the 21st century, especially in the light of climate change and shifts in social, economic and ecological circumstances that will accompany global warming. The author takes an excitingly broad and refreshing approach to environmental crime and investigates a variety of topics including illegal fishing, poaching, wildlife crimes, animal abuse, climate change and ecocide as well as crimes related to waste, energy and contamination.
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Contents: Volume I Acknowledgements ix Introduction Rob White xii PART I ENVIRONMENTAL HARM AND TRANSNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME 1. Susan F. Mandiberg (2009), ‘Locating the Environmental Harm in Environmental Crimes’, Utah Law Review, 4, 1177–222 2 2. Brian J. Preston (2007), ‘Principled Sentencing for Environmental Offences – Part 2: Sentencing Considerations and Options’, Criminal Law Journal, 31 (3), 142–64 48 3. Ali Mohamed Al-Damkhi, Ali Mohamed Khuraibet, Sabah Ahmed Adbul-Wahab and Faten Abdul-Hameed Al-Attar (2009), ‘COMMENTARY: Toward Defining the Concept of Environmental Crime on the Basis of Sustainability’, Environmental Practice, 11 (2), June, 115–24 71 4. Glen Wright (2011), ‘Conceptualising and Combating Transnational Environmental Crime’, Trends in Organised Crime, 14 (4), December, 332–46 81 5. Lorraine Elliott (2012), ‘Fighting Transnational Environmental Crime’, Journal of International Affairs, 66 (1), Fall–Winter, 87–104 96 6. Greg L. Warchol, Linda L. Zupan and Willie Clack (2003), ‘Transnational Criminality: An Analysis of the Illegal Wildlife Market in Southern Africa’, International Criminal Justice Review, 13 (1), May, 1–27 114 7. Carole Gibbs, Meredith L. Gore, Edmund F. McGarrell and Louie Rivers III (2010), ‘Introducing Conservation Criminology: Towards Interdisciplinary Scholarship on Environmental Crimes and Risks’, British Journal of Criminology, 50 (1), 124–44 141 8. Leo R. Douglas and Kelvin Alie (2014), ‘High-Value Natural Resources: Linking Wildlife Conservation to International Conflict, Insecurity, and Development Concerns’, Biological Conservation, 171, 270–77 162 9. Rob White (2017), ‘The Four Ways of Eco-Global Criminology’, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 6 (1), 8–22 170 10. Avi Brisman and Nigel South (2019), ‘Green Criminology and Environmental Crimes and Harms’, Sociology Compass, 13 (1), January, 1–12 185 PART II ILLEGAL FISHING 11. John L. McMullan and David C. Perrier (2002), ‘Lobster Poaching and the Ironies of Law Enforcement’, Law and Society Review, 36 (4), January, 679–717 198 12. Maria Hauck (2009), ‘Crime, Environment and Power: Revisiting the Abalone Fishery’, South African Journal of Criminal Justice, 22 (2), January, 229–45 237 13. Nerea Marteache, Julie Viollaz and Gohar A. Petrossian (2015), ‘Factors Influencing the Choice of a Safe Haven for Offloading Illegally Caught Fish: A Comparative Analysis of Developed and Developing Economies’, Crime Science, 4 (32), October, 1–13 254 14. Gohar Petrossian, Judith S. Weis and Stephen F. Pires (2015), ‘Factors Affecting Crab and Lobster Species Subject to IUU Fishing’, Ocean and Coastal Management, 106, March, 29–34 267 15. Gohar A. Petrossian (2015), ‘Preventing Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing: A Situational Approach’, Biological Conservation, 189, September, 39–48 273 16. Eve de Coning and Emma Witbooi (2015), ‘Towards a New “Fisheries Crime” Paradigm: South Africa as an Illustrative Example’, Marine Policy, 60, October, 208–15 283 PART III POACHING AND BIRDLIFE 17. Stephen Pires and Ronald V. Clarke (2012), ‘Are Parrots CRAVED? An Analysis of Parrot Poaching in Mexico’, Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 49 (1), March, 122–46 292 18. Stephen F. Pires, Jacqueline L. Schneider, Mauricio Herrera and José L. Tella (2016), ‘Spatial, Temporal and Age Sources of Variation in Parrot Poaching in Bolivia’, Bird Conservation International, 26 (3), September, 293–306 317 19. Ronald V. Clarke and Rolf A. de By (2013), ‘Poaching, Habitat Loss and the Decline of Neotropical Parrots: A Comparative Spatial Analysis’, Journal of Experimental Criminology, 9 (3), April, 333–53 331 20. Stephen F. Pires, Jacqueline L. Schneider and Mauricio Herrera (2016), ‘Organized Crime or Crime that is Organized? The Parrot Trade in the Neotropics’, Trends in Organized Crime, 19 (1), March, 4–20 352 21. Jessica S. Kahler and Meredith L. Gore (2012), ‘Beyond the Cooking Pot and Pocket Book: Factors Influencing Noncompliance with Wildlife Poaching Rules’, International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, 36 (2), May, 103–20 369 22. Erica von Essen, Hans Peter Hansen, Helena Nordström Källström, M. Nils Peterson and Tarla Rai Peterson (2014), ‘Deconstructing the Poaching Phenomenon: A Review of Typologies for Understanding Illegal Hunting’, British Journal of Criminology, 54 (4), July, 632–51 387 PART IV WILDLIFE CRIMES 23. Anita Lavorgna (2014), ‘Wildlife Trafficking in the Internet Age’, Crime Science, 3 (5), April, 1–12 408 24. Daan van Uhm (2016), ‘Monkey Business: The Illegal Trade in Barbary Macaques’, Journal of Trafficking, Organized Crime and Security, 2 (1), 36–49 420 25. William D. Moreto and A.M. Lemieux (2015), ‘From CRAVED to CAPTURED: Introducing a Product-based Framework to Examine Illegal Wildlife Markets’, European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research, 21 (3), December, 303–20 434 26. Anh Cao Ngoc and Tanya Wyatt (2013), ‘A Green Criminological Exploration of Illegal Wildlife Trade in Vietnam’, Asian Journal of Criminology, 8 (2), June, 129–42 452 27. Rebecca W.Y. Wong (2016), ‘The Organization of the Illegal Tiger Parts Trade in China’, British Journal of Criminology, 56 (5), September, 995–1013 466 28. Duarte Gonçalves (2017), ‘Society and the Rhino: A Whole-of- Society Approach to Wildlife Crime in South Africa’, South African Crime Quarterly, 60, June, 9–18 485 PART V ANIMAL ABUSE AND KILLING OF ANIMALS 29. Geertrui Cazaux (1999), ‘Beauty and the Beast: Animal Abuse from a Non-Speciesist Criminological Perspective’, Crime, Law and Social Change, 31 (2), March, 105–26 496 30. Michelle Larkins Jacques, Carole Gibbs and Louie Rivers III (2013), ‘Confined Animal Feeding Operations’, CRIMSOC: Journal of Social Criminology, 4, Autumn, 10–63 518 31. Ragnhild Sollund (2011), ‘Expressions of Speciesism: The Effects of Keeping Companion Animals on Animal Abuse, Animal Trafficking and Species Decline’, Crime, Law and Social Change, 55 (5), June, 437–51 572 32. Piers Beirne (2014), ‘Theriocide: Naming Animal Killing’, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 3 (2), 49–66 587 33. Gareth Enticott (2011), ‘Techniques of Neutralising Wildlife Crime in Rural England and Wales’, Journal of Rural Studies, 27 (2), April, 200–208 605 34. Angus Nurse (2016), ‘Beyond the Property Debate: Animal Welfare as a Public Good’, Contemporary Justice Review, 19 (2), 174–87 614 Index Volume II Acknowledgements viii Introduction An introduction to both volumes by the editor appears in Volume I PART I CLIMATE CHANGE AND ECOCIDE 1. Clifford Shearing (2015), ‘Criminology and the Anthropocene’, Criminology and Criminal Justice, 15 (3), June, 255–69 2 2. Robert Agnew (2012), ‘Dire Forecast: A Theoretical Model of the Impact of Climate Change on Crime’, Theoretical Criminology, 16 (1), February, 21–42 17 3. Matthew Ranson (2014), ‘Crime, Weather, and Climate Change’, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 67 (3), 274–302 39 4. Polly Higgins, Damien Short and Nigel South (2013), ‘Protecting the Planet: A Proposal for a Law of Ecocide’, Crime, Law and Social Change, 59 (3), 251–66 68 5. Ronald C. Kramer (2013), ‘Carbon in the Atmosphere and Power in America: Climate Change as State–Corporate Crime’, Journal of Crime and Justice, 36 (2), 153–70 84 6. William C. Tucker (2012), ‘Deceitful Tongues: Is Climate Change Denial a Crime?’, Ecology Law Quarterly, 39 (3), 831–92 102 7. Deniz Tekayak (2016), ‘Protecting Earth Rights and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Towards an International Crime of Ecocide’, Fourth World Journal, 14 (2), Winter, 5–13 164 8. Rob White and Ronald C. Kramer (2015), ‘Critical Criminology and the Struggle Against Climate Change Ecocide’, Critical Criminology, 23 (4), November, 383–99 173 PART II AIR, LAND AND WATER CRIMES 9. Reece Walters (2010), ‘Toxic Atmospheres Air Pollution, Trade and the Politics of Regulation’, Critical Criminology, 18 (4), 307–23 191 10. Rebecca S. Katz (2010), ‘The Corporate Crimes of Dow Chemical and the Failure to Regulate Environmental Pollution’, Critical Criminology, 18 (4), 295–306 208 11. Lieselot C.J. Bisschop, Staci Strobl and Julie S. Viollaz (2018), ‘Getting into Deep Water: Coastal Land Loss and State–Corporate Crime in the Louisiana Bayou’, British Journal of Criminology, 58 (4), July, 886–905 220 12. Elaine Barclay and Robyn Bartel (2015), ‘Defining Environmental Crime: The Perspective of Farmers’, Journal of Rural Studies, 39, June, 188–98 240 13. Hope Johnson, Nigel South and Reece Walters (2016), ‘The Commodification and Exploitation of Fresh Water: Property, Human Rights and Green Criminology’, International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice, 44, March, 146–62 251 14. Robyn Luise Bartel (2005), ‘When the Heavenly Gaze Criminalises: Satellite Surveillance, Land Clearance Regulation and the Human-Nature Relationship’, Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 16 (3), March, 322–39 268 PART III WASTE, ENERGY AND CONTAMINATION 15. Don Liddick (2010), ‘The Traffic in Garbage and Hazardous Wastes: An Overview’, Trends in Organized Crime, 13 (2–3), September, 134–46 287 16. Vincenzo Ruggiero and Nigel South (2013), ‘Toxic State–Corporate Crimes, Neo-Liberalism and Green Criminology: The Hazards and Legacies of the Oil, Chemical and Mineral Industries’, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 2 (2), 12–26 300 17. Karen Hulme and Damien Short (2014), ‘Ecocide and the “Polluter Pays” Principle: The Case of Fracking’, Environmental Scientist, April, 7–10 315 18. David M. Uhlmann (2011), ‘After the Spill is Gone: The Gulf of Mexico, Environmental Crime, and the Criminal Law’, Michigan Law Review, 109, June, 1413–61 319 19. Elizabeth A. Bradshaw (2015), ‘“Obviously, We’re all Oil Industry”: The Criminogenic Structure of the Offshore Oil Industry’, Theoretical Criminology, 19 (3), 376–95 368 20. Dale C. Spencer and Amy Fitzgerald (2013), ‘Three Ecologies, Transversality and Victimization: The Case of the British Petroleum Oil Spill’, Crime, Law and Social Change, 59 (2), March, 209–23 388 PART IV ILLEGAL LOGGING, DEFORESTATION AND BIOPIRACY 21. Tim Boekhout van Solinge (2010), ‘Deforestation Crimes and Conflicts in the Amazon’, Critical Criminology, 18 (4), December, 263–77 404 22. Penny Green, Tony Ward and Kirsten McConnachie (2007), ‘Logging and Legality: Environmental Crime, Civil Society, and the State’, Social Justice, 34 (2), September, 94–110 419 23. Lieselot Bisschop (2012), ‘Out of the Woods: The Illegal Trade in Tropical Timber and a European Trade Hub’, Global Crime, 13 (3), August, 191–212 436 24. Reece Walters (2004), ‘Criminology and Genetically Modified Food’, British Journal of Criminology, 44 (2), March, 151–67 458 25. David Rodríguez Goyes and Nigel South (2016), ‘Land-Grabs, Biopiracy and the Inversion of Justice in Colombia’, British Journal of Criminology, 56 (3), 558–77 475 26. Reece Walters (2006), ‘Crime, Bio-Agriculture and the Exploitation of Hunger’, British Journal of Criminology, 46 (1), 26–45 495 PART V CROSS-OVER CRIMES AND ORGANISED CRIMINAL NETWORKS 27. Johan Bergenas and Ariella Knight (2015), ‘Green Terror: Environmental Crime and Illicit Financing’, SAIS Review of International Affairs, 35 (1), Winter–Spring, 119–31 516 28. Henrik Österblom, Andrew Constable and Sayaka Fukumi (2011), ‘Illegal Fishing and the Organized Crime Analogy’, Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 26 (6), June, 261–62 529 29. Daan P. van Uhm and William D. Moreto (2018), ‘Corruption Within the Illegal Wildlife Trade: A Symbiotic and Antithetical Enterprise’, British Journal of Criminology, 58 (4), July, 864–85 531 30. Peter Martin and Reece Walters (2013), ‘Fraud Risk and the Visibility of Carbon’, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 2 (2), September, 27–42 553 31. Stefano Caneppele, Michele Riccardi and Priscilla Standridge (2013), ‘Green Energy and Black Economy: Mafia Investments in the Wind Power Sector in Italy’, Crime, Law and Social Change, 59 (3), April, 319–39 569 32. Julie Ayling (2013), ‘What Sustains Wildlife Crime? Rhino Horn Trading and the Resilience of Criminal Networks’, Journal of International Wildlife Law and Policy, 16 (1), March, 57–80 590 Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781788970624
Publisert
2020-04-24
Utgiver
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Høyde
244 mm
Bredde
169 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
1280

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Edited by Rob White, Emeritus Distinguished Professor of Criminology, School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania, Australia