

| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKs
|
. | NAB Compactor | 341.762 WHI-I (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | Price for the entire Set of Volumes | 33800 |
Table of contents
Volume I: Conceptual Foundations of Green Criminology
Part 1: Forging A Green Criminology
1. K. Eman, G. Mesko, and G. B. Fields, 'Crime Against the Environment: Green Criminology and Research Challenges in Slovenia', Varstvoslovje: Journal of Criminal Justice and Security, 2009, 11, 4, 574-92.
2. M. Lynch, 'The Greening of Criminology: A Perspective on the 1990s', The Critical Criminologist, 1990, 2, 3, 1-4.
3. N. South, 'A Green Field for Criminology?', Theoretical Criminology, 1998, 2, 2, 211-33.
4. M. Lynch and P. Stretesky, 'The Meaning of Green: Contrasting Criminological Perspectives', Theoretical Criminology, 2003, 7, 2, 217-38.
5. R. White, 'Environmental Issues and the Criminological Imagination', Theoretical Criminology, 2003, 7, 4, 483-506.
6. M. Halsey, 'Against "Green" Criminology', British Journal of Criminology, 2004, 44, 6, 833-53.
Part 2: Conceptualizing Environmental Crime: Different Perspectives
7. F. J. W. Herbig and S. Joubert, 'Criminological Semantics: Conservation Criminology-Vision or Vagary?', Acta Criminologica, 2006, 19, 3, 88-103.
8. C. Gibbs, M. L. Gore, D. F. McGarrell and L. Rivers III, 'Introducing Conservation Criminology: Towards Interdisciplinary Scholarship on Environmental Crimes and Risks', British Journal of Criminology, 2010, 50, 1, 124-44.
9. A. Al-Damkhi, A. Khuraibet, S. Abdul-Wahab, and F. Al-Attar, 'Toward Defining the Concept of Environmental Crime on the Basis of Sustainability', Environmental Practice, 2009, 11, 2, 115-24.
10. V. Ruggiero and N. South, 'Green Criminology and Dirty Collar Crime', Critical Criminology, 2010, 18, 4, 251-62.
11. R. White, 'Environmental Harm and the Political Economy of Consumption', Social Justice, 2002, 29, 1/2, 82-102.
12. P. Lane, 'Ecofeminism Meets Criminology', Theoretical Criminology, 1998, 2, 2, 235-48.
13. L. Robyn, 'State-Corporate Crime on the Navajo Nation: A Legacy of Uranium Mining', Indigenous Policy Journal, 2011, XXII, 2, 1-15.
14. A. Brisman and N. South, 'A Green-Cultural Criminology: An Exploratory Outline', Crime Media Culture, 2012, 9, 1, 1-21.
15. A. Fitzgerald, and L. B. Baralt, 'Media Constructions of Responsibility for the Production and Mitigation of Environmental Harms: The Case of Mercury-Contaminated Fish', Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 2010, 52, 4, 341-68.
Part 3: Animal Abuse, Speciesism, and Green Criminology
16. R. Agnew, 'Causes for Animal Abuse: A Social-Psychological Analysis', Theoretical Criminology, 1998, 2, 2, 177-209.
17. P. Beirne, 'For a Nonspeciesist Criminology: Animal Abuse as an Object of Study', Criminology, 1999, 37, 1, 117-47.
18. G. Cazaux,'Beauty and the Beast: Animal Abuse from a Non-Speciesist Criminological Perspective', Crime, Law & Social Change, 1999, 31, 105-26.
19 . R. Sollund, 'Expressions of Specieism: The Effects of Keeping Companion Animals on Animal Abuse, Animal Trafficking and Species Decline', Crime, Law & Social Change, 2011, 55, 437-51.
20. P. Beirne, 'Animal Abuse and Criminology: Introduction to Special Issue', Crime, Law & Social Change, 2011, 55, 349-57