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Eco-crime and air pollution

Reece Walters
- pp 867-883
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TLDR
The Handbook on Crime as discussed by the authors is a comprehensive edited volume that contains analysis and explanation of the nature, extent, patterns and causes of over 40 different forms of crime, in each case drawing attention to key contemporary debates and social and criminal justice responses to them It also challenges many popular and official conceptions of crime.
Abstract
Book summary: the Handbook on Crime is a comprehensive edited volume that contains analysis and explanation of the nature, extent, patterns and causes of over 40 different forms of crime, in each case drawing attention to key contemporary debates and social and criminal justice responses to them It also challenges many popular and official conceptions of crime This book is one of the few criminological texts that takes as its starting point a range of specific types of criminal activity It addresses not only 'conventional' offences such as shoplifting,burglary, robbery, and vehicle crime, but many other forms of criminal behaviour - often an amalgamation of different legal offences - which attract contemporary media, public and policy concern These include crimes committed not only by individuals, but by organised criminal groups, corporations and governments There are chapters on, for example, gang violence, hate crime, elder abuse, animal abuse,cyber crime, identity theft, money-laundering, eco crimes, drug trafficking, human trafficking, genocide, and global terrorism Many of these topics receive surprisingly little attention in the criminological literature The Handbook on Crime will be a unique text of lasting value to students, researchers,academics, practitioners, policy makers, journalists and all others involved in understanding and preventing criminal behaviour

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Journal ArticleDOI

Toxic atmospheres air pollution, trade and the politics of regulation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine human-made air pollution within a framework of eco-crime and green criminology, identifying how Criminology must continue to push new boundaries and engage with emerging harmful acts of both local and global concern.