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Gendering green criminology / edited by Emma Milne [and four others].

De Gruyter Bristol UP/Policy Press Complete eBook-Package 2023 Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Milne, Emma, editor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Feminist criminology.
Genre:
Electronic books.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (323 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Bristol, England : Bristol University Press, [2023]
Summary:
The first volume in green criminology devoted to gender, this book investigates gendered patterns to offending, victimisation and environmental harms. The collection advances debate on green crimes and climate change and will inspire students and researchers to foreground gender in reducing the challenges affecting our planet's future.
Contents:
Front Cover
Gendering Green Criminology
Copyright information
Table of Contents
List of Figures and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Foreword
1 Why Gendering Green Criminology Matters
Introduction
Feminist and green criminology
Lessons from feminist criminology
Theoretical inspirations
Ambitions of the volume
The contents
Part I: Gendered nature of green crimes and environmental harm
Part II: Gendered impacts and victimisation
Part III: Resistance
Note
References
PART I Gendered Nature of Green Crimes and Environmental Harm
2 Eco-Feminism and the Gendering Green Criminology Project
A note on the importance of theory
Eco-feminism as a benchmark
The founders, hallmarks and trajectories of eco-feminism
Eco-feminism, green criminology and green victimology
Eco-feminism, green criminology and activism
Eco-feminism and intersectionalities
Conclusion
3 New Directions Please! Veganising Green Criminology
Speciesism, intersectionality and criminology
(Green) criminology, speciesism and animals
Veganisms
Veganising and gendering green criminology: activism and change
Notes
4 Men and the Climate Crisis: Why Masculinities Matter for Green Criminology
The masters of climate change
Masculinity in a changing climate
Nature and 'man'
Climate change adaptation and mitigation
Climate change denial
Violence against the environment
Caring for the planet
Paths forward
5 Reconceptualising Gendered Dimensions of Illegal Wildlife Trade in Sub-Saharan Africa through Legal, Policy and Programmatic Means
Introduction: Overview of illegal wildlife trade.
The gendered dimensions of the illegal wildlife trade need not be ignored
Gendered perceptions of and motivations for wildlife trafficking in sub-Saharan Africa
Key attributes of the sub-Saharan Africa wildlife legal ecosystem in the context of gender and illegal wildlife trade
Reinventing laws, policies and programmes for combating wildlife trafficking in sub-Saharan Africa
Reconceptualising gendered motivations in wildlife legal frameworks
Innovating wildlife policies and programmes for combating illegal wildlife trade
Formulating wildlife gender policies and programmes around the four-pillar and Actors, Drivers, Impacts and Responses frameworks
Redesigning and designing strategies
Application of the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime's Wildlife and Forest Crime Analytic Toolkit
Empowering updates of diverse alternatives to illegal wildlife trade based livelihood opportunities
Engaging non-governmental organisations and youth groups
6 The Attitudes of People with Different Gender Identities and Different Perceptions of Gender Roles towards Nonhuman Animals and Their Welfare
The gender patterning of attitudes to nonhuman animals
Methods and data
Findings
Gender identities
Gender roles
Analysis
Unpacking gender identity and attitudes towards nonhuman animals
Gender roles and nonhuman animals
Limitations of this study
PART II Gendered Impacts and Victimisation
7 Queering Green Criminology: The Impacts of Zoonotic Diseases on the LGBTQ Community
Statement of positionality
Disasters
Review of literature
Employment and housing discrimination
Incarceration
Isolation
Queering green criminology in practice
References.
8 Women and the Structural Violence of 'Fast-Fashion' Global Production: Victimisation, Poorcide and Environmental Harms
Gender: work-labour-poverty-violence
Global fast fashion
Assembly line work in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka
The ready-made garment industry in Bangladesh
Assembly line work in Sri Lanka
Social harm and state-corporate crime
Social harms and environmental impacts
Incubating disaster and COVID-19
Dying for fashion: Bangladesh
Health disaster and gendered poorcide: Sri Lanka
Precarity and the pandemic
Discussion
9 Green Victims of the International Waste Industry: An Analysis from a Gender Perspective
International waste industry as a perfect scenario to waste crime
International waste industry dynamics
Waste crime and its characteristics
Consequences of waste crime
Environmental damage and destruction of ecosystems
Analysing the victims of waste crime from a gender perspective
Ship breaking
E-waste recycling
Consequences of waste crime in terms of social harm and inequalities
Concluding reflections
10 The Green Road Project and Women's Green Victimisation in Turkey
Green feminist criminology
Methodology
The Green Road Project and women's green victimisation in the Eastern Black Sea region of Turkey
Women's resistance and collective actions
11 'Daughters of Dust': An Eco-Feminist Analysis of Debt-for-Nature Swaps and Underage Marriage in Indonesia
Positionality
The 'logic of domination'
Indonesia's debt-for-nature swap
Underage marriage in Indonesia
PART III Resistance.
12 Women's Experiences of Environmental Harm in Colombia: Learning from Black, Decolonial and Indigenous Communitarian Feminisms
Theorising gendered experiences of environmental harm in Colombia
Continuums of environmental harm in Colombia
Colonial land dispossession
Environmental legacies of conflict
Contemporary challenges
Resistance and risk
Gendering environmental harm in Colombia: learning from Black, decolonial and Indigenous communitarian feminisms
Theorising gendered violence
Dispossession, displacement and gendered violence
Extractivism and 'everyday' violence
Agency and resistance
13 Vegan Feminism Then and Now: Women's Resistance to Legalised Speciesism across Three Waves of Activism
Charlotte Despard and Edwardian anti-speciesist activism
Patty Mark and modern anti-speciesist activism
Sarah Kistle and intersectional anti-speciesism
14 'To Preserve and Promote': Gendering Harm in Green Cultural Criminology
Cultural green criminology
Hegemonic masculinity and malestream norms
Alberta
Gendered cultural narratives
The manifestation of gendered cultural narratives
15 David and Goliath: Exploring the Male Burdens of Patriarchal Capitalism
Men resisting and/or responding to ecological destruction
Sourcing the problem
Men responding to crisis
Disaster relief: immediate material needs
Changing social roles: farming and food
Oppositions and social conflicts
Key analytical and political issues
Index.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
1-5292-2965-0
1-5292-2964-2
OCLC:
1405368504

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