2015
DOI: 10.1093/bjc/azu117
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Greening Justice: Examining the Interfaces of Criminal, Social and Ecological Justice

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Cited by 46 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Stories of prisoners becoming involved in horticulture can challenge pejorative stereotypes of the subjects of punishment and how they spend their time while 'doing time' (51). However, the importance of providing initiatives that create social value and make a positive difference cannot be underestimated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stories of prisoners becoming involved in horticulture can challenge pejorative stereotypes of the subjects of punishment and how they spend their time while 'doing time' (51). However, the importance of providing initiatives that create social value and make a positive difference cannot be underestimated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, it is still somewhat puzzling to us that, for the most part, green criminologists have sidestepped prisons and imprisonment as subjects worth investigating. Recent commentary by White and Graham (2015) in their broader discussion of the 'greening' of policing, courts, prisons, offender supervision and community reintegration, is to be welcomed, but otherwise (and as White and Graham also point out) there has been a curious silence on the subject of prisons from within this rapidly growing field. The absence of empirical research on the relationship between sustainability and mass incarceration is especially curious since green criminology shares a lexicon similar to that used by prison researchers, particularly those who write from a critical, radical or abolitionist perspective.…”
Section: Concluding Thoughtsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Se hace referencia a la "Criminología Verde" cuando aparecen casos de lo que puede entenderse como ecocidio. Se ha propuesto que las leyes deben contemplar como crímenes las diversas formas de maltrato al medioambiente, el maltrato animal y todas las actividades que pudieran ocasionar pérdidas irremediables en la biodiversidad (White & Graham, 2015). Hay algunas iniciativas importantes que pretenden contribuir al mantenimiento de la biodiversidad tal como la conocemos.…”
Section: "Green Criminology"unclassified