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Environmental Harm: An Eco-justice Perspective: Studies in Social Harm

Autor Rob White
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 sep 2014
Challenging conventional definitions of environmental harm, this book considers the problem from an eco-justice perspective. Rob White identifies and analyzes three interconnected approaches to environmental harm: environmental justice (which focuses on harm to humans), ecological justice (which focuses on harm to the environment), and species justice (which focuses on harm to nonhuman animals). Examining the efforts of activists and social movements engaged in these causes, White describes the tensions between the three approaches and calls for a new eco-justice framework that will allow for the reconciliation of these differences.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781447300410
ISBN-10: 1447300416
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bristol University Press
Colecția Policy Press
Seria Studies in Social Harm


Notă biografică

Rob White is professor of criminology in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Tasmania, Australia. His books include Transnational Environmental Crime: Toward an Eco-Global Criminology and Crimes Against Nature.
 

Cuprins

List of tables, figures and boxes
About the author
Acknowledgements
Introduction
                Environmental harm and social harm approaches
                Green criminology and environmental harm
                An eco-justice perspective
                Conflicting views and moral dilemmas
1              Justice-based approaches to environmental harm
                Introduction
                Components of an eco-justice perspective
                Contentious concepts
                Key questions about harm
                The moral calculus: weighing up the harm
                Conclusion
2              Environmental justice and harm to humans
                Introduction
                Contentious concepts: environmental justice
                Social patterns of harm and risk
                Harm, place and the local
                Transborder conflicts over land
                Conclusion: measuring the value of human life
3              Conservation, ecological justice and harm to nature
                Introduction
                Contentious concepts: ecological justice
                Transforming nature
                Land, property and the global commons
                Conservationism and social division
                Conclusion: measuring the value of nature
4              Species justice and harm to animals
                Introduction
                Contentious concepts: species justice
                Categorising animals
                Crime, criminology and animals
                Animals, particular species and individuals
                Conclusion: measuring the value of animals
5              Toward eco-justice for all
                Introduction
                Contentious concepts: eco-justice
                Nature, species and culture
                Socio-economic context of environmental harm
                Eco-justice in practice
                Conclusion: where to from here?
References
Index

Recenzii

“Rob White has been at the forefront of green criminology, developing frameworks of analysis for understanding ecological degradation. In this book, he blazes an important new trail, establishing a moral basis for action.”

"Provides another cogent argument for considering social justice and environmental sustainability as aspects of an integrated system."

“White provides a magisterial overview of the promise and the performance of recent green writing about environmental, ecological and species justice. His insight is keen and genuine, his commentary on difficult and troubling issues always fair-minded.”

"There are few scholars whose names are as synonymous with the fields of green criminology and the study of environmental harm as is Rob White’s. . . . Environmental Harm continues to refine the conceptual and theoretical boundaries of green criminology and the study of environmental problems. . . . A concise and practical read that handily summarizes key arguments and debates that any green criminologist or environmental harm researcher should be aware of. It should find a place on the bookshelves of many scholars."