No. 22-3, August 2018
Index
- Animal abuse, biotechnology and species justice
- Book review: David Rodríguez Goyes, Hanneke Mol, Avi Brisman and Nigel South (eds), Environmental Crime in Latin America: The Theft of Nature and the Poisoning of the Land (Palgrave Studies in Green Criminology)
- Book review: Grant Pink and Rob White (eds), Environmental Crime and Collaborative State Intervention
- Book review: Jennifer Maher, Harriet Pierpoint and Piers Beirne (eds), The Palgrave International Handbook of Animal Abuse Studies
- Book review: Rob White, Climate Change Criminology
- Ecocentrism and criminal justice
- Ecocide, genocide, capitalism and colonialism: Consequences for indigenous peoples and glocal ecosystems environments
- Editors’ introduction to the special issue: ‘For a green criminology’—20 years and onwards
- Geographies of landscape: Representation, power and meaning
- Green criminology and native peoples: The treadmill of production and the killing of indigenous environmental activists
- Raw, roast or half-baked? Hogarth’s beef in Calais Gate
- Representing the “invisible crime” of climate change in an age of post-truth
- The social construction of the value of wildlife: A green cultural criminological perspective
- Understanding animal (ab)use: Green criminological contributions, missed opportunities and a way forward