Green Criminology entry (original) (raw)
Related papers
Pushing the boundaries of (a) green criminology: environmental harm as a cause of crime
Greencriminology.org, 2012
Elsewhere on this site I have addressed the question ‘What is Green Criminology?’, but here I want to suggest that my previous definition, whilst reflecting much (probably most, but by no means all) of the work of green criminologists to date, perhaps sells the idea of a green criminology short. Rather than seeing green criminology as “the analysis of environmental harms from a criminological perspective, or the application of criminological thought to environmental issues” perhaps a better definition – or conceptual framework – would be the application of an ecological perspective to the problem of ‘crime’ in general. This can encompass everything within the earlier definition, but can also include a whole lot more. To put it another way, I would like to suggest that there is more to a green criminology than just the focus on green crime.
Introduction: Green Criminology in the 21st Century
The term 'Green Criminology' was first introduced by Lynch in 1990 although the history of criminologists concerning themselves with specific environmental and animal related crimes goes back further than this For example Pecar (1981) put forward an even earlier statement about new environmentally damaging forms of criminality in Slovenia and the role of criminology and sciences related to this (Eman, Meško and Fields 2009: 584) but with no English-language translation Pecar's article made no international impact. Furthermore, although Lynch set out the scope and aims of a green criminology in a way that can still stand as a 'manifesto' statement, its place of publication meant it did not reach a wide audience at the time (although once 'rediscovered' it proved highly influential). Potter (2012) has reviewed arguments that might be put in order to 'justify' a green criminology and this is a useful exercise. But in an important sense, a green criminology is justified because it was inevitable and necessary. It reflected scientific interests and political challenges of the moment, carried forward the momentum of critical non-conformist criminology, and offered a point of contact and convergence. So, no particular contribution was required as the 'first' or 'unique' catalyst for the development of a green or eco-criminology, for this was already underway in many places, for similar reasons, with teachers, researchers and writers expressing parallel concerns and proposing a similar project for criminology (see, for example, Clifford 1998; Edwards et al
This article offers an overview of recent work on environmental crime and regulation. It demonstrated the majority of such scholarship is imbued by quite problematic ideas concerning how best to envisage the nature of environmental harm and the type of regulatory structures which should be promoted to assist in the amelioration of environmental damage. The article concludes with a very brief discussion of the kinds of theoretical tools which might be used in place of orthodox framings of environmental crime and its prevention.
Green Criminology: Reflections, Connections, Horizons
International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 2014
This paper traces aspects of the development of a ‘green’ criminology. It starts with personal reflections and then describes the emergence of explicit statements of a green criminological perspective. Initially these statements were independently voiced, in different parts of the world but they reflected shared concerns. These works have found unification as a ‘green’, ‘eco‐global’ or ‘conservation’ criminology. The paper reviews the classifications available when talking about not only legally‐defined crimes but also legally perpetrated harms, as well as typologies of such harms and crimes. It then looks at the integration of ‘green’ and ‘traditional’ criminological thinking before briefly exploring four dimensions of concern for today and the future.
Special Edition: Green Criminology Matters, Guest Editors’ Introduction
International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 2014
In 1998 the journal Theoretical Criminology published an innovative special issue on green criminology, which was compiled by two of the editors of the present collection. The focus of that special issue was a plea for the theoretical development of green criminological approaches to our relationships with ‘nature’, including how we adversely affect the state of the environment and the lives of nonhuman animals (henceforth, ‘animals’). Work in this new field has since continued apace. The study of harms against humanity, the environment and other species – inflicted systematically by powerful profit-seeking entities and on an everyday basis by ordinary people – is increasingly seen as a social concern of extraordinary importance. Green criminology matters! ...
Green Criminology and Green Theories of Justice
Springer eBooks, 2019
The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use.
Exploring Green Criminology: Toward a Green Criminological Revolution
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data a catalogue record for this book is available from the British library The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows: lynch, michael J. Exploring green criminology : toward a green criminological revolution / by michael J. lynch and paul B. Stretesky. pages cm.-(green criminology) includes bibliographical references and index.
Environmental Crime and its Victims: Perspectives within Green Criminology, 2014
The argument is that an ecological perspective can make important contributions to criminological theory: broadly speaking, as we increasingly recognise that sustained environmental harm often creates social harm, and that environmental victimisation often contributes to criminality, it follows that criminology should recognise environmental harm not just as crime, but as an important contributory factor in the genesis of crime. If we accept the prediction that environmental problems – and therefore related social problems – are likely to persist, and probably accelerate, as we move further into the 21st century, we should recognise that the links between this and crime are also likely to accelerate. This leads to the final aim of the current chapter: to make the argument that a green criminology (that is, a criminology that is informed by an ecological as well as a social science) deserves to be seen as having something useful to say about the problem of crime as a whole, rather than remaining a niche area confined to focusing on the sub-category of environmental crime.