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Introduction: Green Criminology in the 21 st Century
Matthew Hall
Jennifer Maher
Angus Nurse
Gary Potter
Nigel South
Tanya Wyatt
PART I - EXAMINING GREEN CRIMINOLOGY
Chapter 1: Carbon economics and transnational resistance to ecocide
Rob White
Chapter 2: Doing 'green criminology': methodologies, research strategies and values (or lack thereof?)
Matthew Hall
Chapter 3: Can the individual survive the greening of criminology?
Dominic A. Wood
Chapter 4: Transnational environmental crime: meeting future challenges through networked regulatory innovations
Julie Ayling
PART II - CASE STUDIES IN GREEN CRIMINOLOGY
Chapter 5: The animal other: legal and illegal theriocide
Ragnhild Sollund
Chapter 6: Environmental victimization: a case study of citizen's experiences with oil and gas development in Colorado, USA
Tara O'Connor Shelley
Tara Opsal
Chapter 7: Pirates or protectors? A critical perspective on extreme environmental activism
Angus Nurse
Middlesex University London
Chapter 8: Eco-Crime and fresh water
Hope Johnson
Nigel South
Reece Walters
Chapter 9: The other side of agricultural crime: when farmers offend
Joseph F. Donnermeyer
PART III - QUESTIONS AND AGENDAS IN GREEN CRIMINOLOGY
Chapter 10: A new benchmark for green criminology: the case for community-based human rights impact assessments of REDD+ programmes
Malayna Raftopoulos
Damien Short
Chapter 11: Implementation and enforcement of environmental law: the role of professional practitioners
Grant Pink
Chapter 12: Examining secondary ecological disorganization from wildlife harms
Michael J. Lynch
Michael A. Long
Kimberly L. Barrett
Paul B. Stretesky
Chapter 13: Green cultural criminology, intergenerational (in)equity and `life stage dissolution'
Avi Brisman
Nigel South
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