Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Quantitative studies in green and conservation criminology : the measurement of environmental harm and crime / edited by Michael J. Lynch and Stephen F. Pires
Published Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019
©2020

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xiii, 236 pages) : illustration, maps
Series Green Criminology series
Green criminology series.
Contents Foreword : quantitative studies in green and conservation criminology / Ronald V. Clarke -- Why quantitative studies matter in green and conservation criminology / Michael J. Lynch and Stephen F. Pires -- The branches of green criminology : a bibliometric citation analysis 2000-2017 / Ryan Thomson, Tameka Samuels-Jones, and Liam Downs -- Quantitative studies in green and conservation criminology : a literature review / Michael J. Lynch, Paul B. Stretesky, Michael A. Long and Kimberly L. Barrett -- An agenda for criminological investigation of crimes impacting primates / Lauren Wilson and Justin Kurland -- Structural and geographic features of illegal urban bushmeat trafficking / Jessica Kahler, Rachel Boratto, Liliana Vanegas, Michelle Wieland, and Meredith Gore -- Human-wildlife competition : the role of human activities, environmental transformation, and water scarcity in explaining mammalian species loss / Kwan-Lamar Blount-Hill and Mangai Natarajan -- Comparing and contrasting wildlife seizures made at eu and us entry points / Daan P.V. Uhm, Stephen F. Pires, Monique Sosnowski, and Gohar Petrossian -- Examining factors predicting the use of wildlife killing by the US Fish and Wildlife Service across states / Leo Genco -- The ten-year (1999-2008) trend in hazardous waste violations and punishments in the united state from US EPA resource conservation recovery act data / Michael J. Lynch -- Waste crimes in italy: an empirical exploration of their geographic distribution / Daniela Andreatta -- Longitudinal methods for analyzing green crime / Michael A. Long, Paul B. Stretesky, and Kimberly L. Barrett -- No longer victorian children : understanding green victimization through an analysis of victim impact statements / Joshua Ozymy and Melissa Jarrell
Summary During the early development and throughout the short history of green/conservation criminology, limited attention has been directed toward quantitative analyses of relevant environmental crime, law and justice concerns. While recognizing the importance of establishing a theory and terminology in the early stages of development, this book redresses this imbalance. The work features contributions that undertake empirical quantitative studies of green/conservation crime and justice issues by both conservation and green criminologists. The collection highlights the shared concerns of these groups within important forms of ecological crime and victimization, and illustrates the ways in which these approaches can be undertaken quantitatively. It includes quantitative conservation/green criminological studies that represent the work of both well-established scholars in these fields, along with studies by scholars whose works are less well-known and who are also contributing to shaping this area of research. The book presents a valuable contribution to the areas of Green and Conservation Criminology. It will appeal to academics and students working in these areas
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Michael J. Lynch is a professor in the department of criminology, University of South Florida. He has examined green crime, law and justice issues for over thirty years, and published the first discussion of green criminology. His recent publications have appeared in Capitalism, Nature, Socialism; Ecological Economics; Global Ecology and Conservation; Society and Natural Resources; Journal of Quantitative Criminology; Theoretical Criminology; Deviant Behavior; and Sociological Spectrum, among others. He is recipient of Lifetime Achievement Awards from the American Society of Criminology Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice, and the Division on White Collar and Corporate Crime. Stephen Pires, PhD, is an associate professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Florida International University. He is an expert on the illegal wildlife trade with a particular focus on commonly-poached species (i.e. hot products), illicit markets, & the organization of the illegal trade. His work has appeared in the Journal of Research in Crime & Delinquency, The British Journal of Criminology, Bird Conservational International, and Forest Policy & Economics, and has co-authored the book, "Wildlife Crime: An Environmental Criminology and Crime Science Perspective" (2018)
Description based on online resource, title from digital title page (viewed on July 31, 2020)
Subject Offenses against the environment.
LAW -- General.
LAW -- Criminal Law -- General.
LAW -- Environmental.
Offenses against the environment
Form Electronic book
Author Lynch, Michael J., editor.
Pires, Stephen F., editor.
ISBN 9780429844232
0429844239
9780429453946
0429453949
9780429844225
0429844220
9780429844218
0429844212