Green Criminology and the Law
| Ente Autore: | |
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| Altri autori: | , |
| Riassunto: | XXIII, 415 p. 5 illus., 4 illus. in color. text |
| Lingua: | inglese |
| Pubblicazione: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
2022.
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| Edizione: | 1st ed. 2022. |
| Serie: | Palgrave Studies in Green Criminology,
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| Soggetti: | |
| Accesso online: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-82412-9 |
| Natura: | Elettronico Libro |
Sommario:
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 - It Isn’t Easy Being Green: The Trials and Triumphs of the Green Criminology-Law Nexus
- Section I - Reconsidering Legal Actors and Institutional Mechanisms. Chapter 2 - Standard Concerns: An Examination of Public-Interest Considerations with Respect to Prosecutions of Environmental Advocates and Indigenous Land Defenders
- Chapter 3 - Green Criminology, Policing and Protecting the Environment
- Chapter 4 - Environmental Crime, Ecological Expertise and Specialist Environment Courts
- Chapter 5 - Standing Trial for Lily: How Open Rescue Activists Mobilize Their Criminal Prosecutions for Animal Liberation
- Section II - Challenging Legislation and Legal Regulations. Chapter 6 - Fish Farms in Canada: Where is the Law?
- Chapter 7 - Plastic: From Miracle Material to Detritus and Disaster: A History of Benefits, Harms, Pandemics and the Limitations of Regulation
- Chapter 8 - Criminalizing Environmentally Beneficial Activities: Hemp and Canada’s Cannabis Act
- Chapter 9 - Dirty Legislation for Dirty Work
- Section III - Retracing Legal Rights and Responsibilities. Chapter 10 - Palliative Animal Law: The War on Animal Cruelty
- Chapter 11 - Responsibility in End Time: Environmental Harm and the Role of Law in the Anthropocene
- Chapter 12 - Te Awa Tupua: An Exemplary Environmental Law? Sarah Monod de Froideville and Rebekah Bowling
- Chapter 13 - Mother Earth in Environmental Activism: Indigeneity, Maternal Thinking, and Animism in the Keystone Pipeline Debate
- Section IV - Future Directions for Green Criminology and Law. Chapter 14 - Widening the Scope of ‘Earth’ Jurisprudence and ‘Green’ Criminology? Towards Preserving Extra-Terrestrial Heritage Sites on Celestial Bodies
- Chapter 15 - Red, White and Green: White Paper Assimilation Strategies in an Era of Environmental Crisis
- Chapter 16 - Restorative Justice Conferencing: A Vehicle for Repairing Harm Emanating from Lawful but Awful Activity
- Chapter 17 - Green Criminology and an International Law Against Ecocide: Using Strict Liability and Superior Responsibility to Prevent State and Corporate Denial of Environmental Harms.