Gendering Green Criminology 1st Edition by Emma Milne, Pamela Davies, James Heydon, Kay Peggs, Tanya Wyatt – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1529229634, 9781529229639
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1529229634
ISBN 13: 9781529229639
Author: Emma Milne, Pamela Davies, James Heydon, Kay Peggs, Tanya Wyatt
Gendering Green Criminology 1st Table of contents:
PART I: Gendered Nature of Green Crimes and Environmental Harm
2. Eco-Feminism and the Gendering Green Criminology Project
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Introduction
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A Note on the Importance of Theory
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Eco-Feminism as a Benchmark
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The Founders, Hallmarks and Trajectories of Eco-Feminism
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Eco-Feminism, Green Criminology and Green Victimology
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Eco-Feminism, Green Criminology and Activism
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Eco-Feminism and Intersectionalities
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Conclusion
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References
3. New Directions Please! Veganising Green Criminology
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Introduction
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Speciesism, Intersectionality and Criminology
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(Green) Criminology, Speciesism and Animals
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Veganisms
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Veganising and Gendering Green Criminology: Activism and Change
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Notes
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References
4. Men and the Climate Crisis: Why Masculinities Matter for Green Criminology
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Introduction
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The Masters of Climate Change
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Masculinity in a Changing Climate
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Nature and ‘Man’
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Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
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Climate Change Denial
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Violence Against the Environment
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Caring for the Planet
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Paths Forward
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Conclusion
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References
5. Reconceptualising Gendered Dimensions of Illegal Wildlife Trade in Sub-Saharan Africa Through Legal Frameworks
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Introduction: Overview of Illegal Wildlife Trade
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The Gendered Dimensions of the Illegal Wildlife Trade Need Not Be Ignored
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Gendered Perceptions of and Motivations for Wildlife Trafficking in Sub-Saharan Africa
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Key Attributes of the Sub-Saharan Africa Wildlife Legal Ecosystem in the Context of Gender and Illegality
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Reinventing Laws, Policies and Programmes for Combating Wildlife Trafficking
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Reconceptualising Gendered Motivations in Wildlife Legal Frameworks
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Innovating Wildlife Policies and Programmes for Combating Illegal Wildlife Trade
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Formulating Wildlife Gender Policies and Programmes Around the Four-Pillar and Actors, Drivers, Impacts Model
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Redesigning and Designing Strategies
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Application of the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime’s Wildlife and Forest Crime Toolkit
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Empowering Updates of Diverse Alternatives to Illegal Wildlife Trade-Based Livelihood Opportunities
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Engaging Non-Governmental Organisations and Youth Groups
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Conclusion
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References
6. The Attitudes of People with Different Gender Identities and Different Perceptions of Gender Roles
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Introduction
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The Gender Patterning of Attitudes to Nonhuman Animals
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Methods and Data
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Findings
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Gender Identities
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Gender Roles
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Analysis
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Unpacking Gender Identity and Attitudes Towards Nonhuman Animals
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Gender Roles and Nonhuman Animals
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Limitations of this Study
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Conclusion
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Note
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References
PART II: Gendered Impacts and Victimisation
7. Queering Green Criminology: The Impacts of Zoonotic Diseases on the LGBTQ Community
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Introduction
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Statement of Positionality
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Disasters
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Review of Literature
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Employment and Housing Discrimination
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Incarceration
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Isolation
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Queering Green Criminology in Practice
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Notes
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References
8. Women and the Structural Violence of ‘Fast-Fashion’ Global Production: Victimisation, Poorcide
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Introduction
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Gender: Work-Labour-Poverty-Violence
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Global Fast Fashion
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Assembly Line Work in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka
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The Ready-Made Garment Industry in Bangladesh
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Assembly Line Work in Sri Lanka
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Social Harm and State-Corporate Crime
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Social Harms and Environmental Impacts
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Incubating Disaster and COVID-19
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Dying for Fashion: Bangladesh
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Health Disaster and Gendered Poorcide: Sri Lanka
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Precarity and the Pandemic
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Discussion
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Conclusion
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Note
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References
9. Green Victims of the International Waste Industry: An Analysis from a Gender Perspective
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Introduction
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International Waste Industry as a Perfect Scenario to Waste Crime
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International Waste Industry Dynamics
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Waste Crime and Its Characteristics
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Consequences of Waste Crime
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Environmental Damage and Destruction of Ecosystems
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Analysing the Victims of Waste Crime from a Gender Perspective
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Ship Breaking
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E-Waste Recycling
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Consequences of Waste Crime in Terms of Social Harm and Inequalities
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Concluding Reflections
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References
10. The Green Road Project and Women’s Green Victimisation in Turkey
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Introduction
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Green Feminist Criminology
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Methodology
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The Green Road Project and Women’s Green Victimisation in the Eastern Black Sea Region of Turkey
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Women’s Resistance and Collective Actions
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Conclusion
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Acknowledgements
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References
11. ‘Daughters of Dust’: An Eco-Feminist Analysis of Debt-for-Nature Swaps and Underage Marriage
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Introduction
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Positionality
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The ‘Logic of Domination’
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Indonesia’s Debt-for-Nature Swap
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Underage Marriage in Indonesia
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Conclusion
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References
PART III: Resistance
12. Women’s Experiences of Environmental Harm in Colombia: Learning from Black, Decolonial and Indigenous Communities
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Introduction
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Theorising Gendered Experiences of Environmental Harm in Colombia
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Continuums of Environmental Harm in Colombia
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Colonial Land Dispossession
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Environmental Legacies of Conflict
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Contemporary Challenges
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Resistance and Risk
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Gendering Environmental Harm in Colombia: Learning from Black, Decolonial and Indigenous Communities
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Theorising Gendered Violence
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Dispossession, Displacement and Gendered Violence
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Extractivism and ‘Everyday’ Violence
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Agency and Resistance
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Conclusion
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Notes
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References
13. Vegan Feminism Then and Now: Women’s Resistance to Legalised Speciesism Across Three Waves of Activism
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Introduction
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Charlotte Despard and Edwardian Anti-Speciesist Activism
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Patty Mark and Modern Anti-Speciesist Activism
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Sarah Kistle and Intersectional Anti-Speciesism
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Conclusion
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Notes
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References
14. ‘To Preserve and Promote’: Gendering Harm in Green Cultural Criminology
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Introduction
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Cultural Green Criminology
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Hegemonic Masculinity and Malestream Norms
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Alberta
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Gendered Cultural Narratives
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The Manifestation of Gendered Cultural Narratives
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Conclusion
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References
15. David and Goliath: Exploring the Male Burdens of Patriarchal Capitalism
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Introduction
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Men Resisting and/or Responding to Ecological Destruction
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Sourcing the Problem
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Men Responding to Crisis
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Disaster Relief: Immediate Material Needs
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Changing Social Roles: Farming and Food
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Oppositions and Social Conflicts
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Key Analytical and Political Issues
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Tags: Emma Milne, Pamela Davies, James Heydon, Kay Peggs, Tanya Wyatt, Green Criminology


