1,721,079 research outputs found

    The Local Context of Wildlife Trafficking: The Heathrow Animal Reception Centre

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    This edited collection brings together internationally recognized scholars to explore Green Criminology through interdisciplinary lenses of power, justice and harm. The chapters provide innovative case study analyses from North America, Europe and Australia that seek to advance theoretical, policy and practice discourses about environmental harm. This book brings together transnational debates in environmental law, policy and justice. In doing so, it examines international agreements and policy within diverse environmental discourses of sociology, criminology and political economy. This book is an essential source for scholars in this emerging area of criminology, as well as environmental studies more broadly

    Crime and the commodification of carbon

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    Carbon will be the world's biggest market. Barclays was the first UK bank to set up a dedicated carbon trading desk to help clients, and Barclays Capital is the most active player in the emissions trading market having traded 300 million tonnes as at February 2007. (Barclays, 2007: 1

    Editorial

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    In May 2011, the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies published Lessons for the Coalition: an end of term report on New Labour and Criminal Justice (Silvestri, 2011). In that collection I described Labour's performance on environmental issues as ‘too little too late’. The UK experienced a period of Blair/Brown environmental governance that demonstrated ‘symbolic success but real failure’. Amongst New Labour's environmental achievements were the establishment of the Climate Change Act 2008, the creation of the Department of Energy and Climate Change and the establishment of numerous green quangos to oversee and implement a range of environmental policies. However, these steps forward were seemingly threatened by the early days of a Cameron-led coalition where austerity measure, trade and the abolition of green quangos were on the cards. In sum, I concluded ‘future UK government report cards on the environment do not look good’ (Walters, 2011). After two and half years of a Conservative/Liberal Democratic coalition, and much rhetoric about it being ‘the greenest government ever’, the interim report card for the Cameron government on environmental matters is grim reading indeed. The demise of green quangos, record carbon emissions, renewable energies policies stultified, environmental criminality and victimisation all but ignored, and billions of pounds lost to environmental corporate fraudsters are just some of the headlines of Tory inspired governance with much environmental rhetoric and no environmental results.\u

    Government crime policy and moral contamination

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    Introduction to criminological thought

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    Politics, economy and environmental crime

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    Issues pertaining to the protection of the planet continue to capture media headlines and provoke public and political debate. The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has referred to global warming as a ‘weapon of mass destruction’ (IPCC, 2007). However, such earth threatening issues are not confined to legal processes of industrial development but are also found in the increasing amount of environmental crime. For many, the destruction of natural habitats and the pollution of oceans, waterways and the atmosphere is a global catastrophe; for others (including certain States and corporations) it is a necessary bi-product of commercial profit and capital accumulation. The challenge for environmental protection and regulation is that it often competes or is superseded by trade law – whereby economic prosperity and quality of human life is viewed as a paramount political and social objective
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