File #2630: "2019_Book_GreenCriminologyAndGreenTheori.pdf"

2019_Book_GreenCriminologyAndGreenTheori.pdf

Text

1|Preface|6
1|Contents|10
1|List of Tables|12
1|1: Introduction: Green Theories of Justice and Political Economy|13
2|The Chapters That Follow|20
2|Nature “Versus” Humans or a Nature-Human Dialectic?|22
2|Toward Conceptualizing Eco-justice|26
2|References|27
1|2: Connecting Ecological Decline and Eco-justice|33
2|Indicators of Ecological Decline|36
3|Planetary Boundaries|36
4|The Planetary Boundaries, Measures and Effects|38
5|Carbon Dioxide Concentration and Radiative Forcing|38
5|Ocean Acidification|39
5|Stratospheric Ozone Depletion|40
5|Biogeochemical Availability|40
5|Biodiversity Loss|41
5|Global Freshwater Use|41
5|Land Use Change|42
5|Atmospheric Aerosol Loading|42
5|Pollutants|42
4|Summing Up Rockstrom et al.|43
3|The Human Ecological Footprint|44
2|References|47
1|3: Eco-justice and an Orientation toward the Ecosystem|53
2|Naming the Concept of Green Justice|58
2|The Concept of Eco-justice|62
2|Eco-justice, Planetary Boundaries and the Human Ecological Footprint|63
2|Capitalism and the Production of Eco-injustice|67
2|References|69
1|4: Human Social & Ecological Justice in the Global World Capitalist System and the Treadmill of Production|75
2|HSEJ and Eco-justice|75
3|The Capitalist World System, the Treadmill of Production and HSEJ|76
2|World System Theory and HSEJ|77
2|The Treadmill of Production and HSEJ|79
2|Connecting the Capitalist World System, the Treadmill of Production and HSEJ|83
2|Acknowledging Ecologically Unequal Exchange Effects|87
2|The Relevance of Ecological Footprints and Consumption Patterns in the Global Capitalist World System|90
3|Ecologically Unequal Exchange Includes Pollution and Waste|93
2|Acknowledging Natural Capital Impacts|94
2|Capitalism, Native People and HSEJ Issues|96
2|Conclusion|98
2|References|98
1|5: Unsustainable Economic Development and Nonhuman Ecological Justice|104
2|The Political Economic Analysis of Nonhuman Ecological Justice|106
3|Nonhuman Eco-injustice (NHEJ)|109
3|Nonhuman Species Extinctions|111
3|Nonhuman Ecological Injustice in the Extant Green Criminological Literature|119
3|Ebay and the Treadmill of Animal Commodification|124
2|Conclusion|129
2|References|130
1|6: Gaia and a Green Theory of Justice|137
2|Background: Moving Away from the “Only Humans Matter” Concept of Justice|139
2|Propositions on Gaia, Disequilibrium, Injustice and the Human Origins of Harms and Injustice Against Gaia|141
2|Propositions Elaborating Human Harm and Injustice Against Gaia|145
2|Implications and Analysis|148
3|Enter Political Economy|154
2|Conclusion|156
2|References|157
1|7: Metabolic Rift and Eco-justice|160
2|Why Metabolic Rift?|163
2|What Is Metabolic Rift?|169
2|The Empirical Dimensions of the Metabolic Rift|176
2|The Metabolic Rift as Crime|180
2|The Empirical Dimensions of Planetary Boundaries and Ecosystem Stability|184
2|Ecological Justice, the Metabolic Rift and Planetary Boundaries|186
2|Conclusion|193
2|References|193
1|8: Political Economy, Food and Eco-justice|202
2|Food Regimes and the Political Economy of Food|203
2|Industrialization of Food Production|205
2|Transnational Organization of Production|208
2|Eco-justice and Food|211
2|Conclusion|213
2|References|214
1|9: Conclusion|216
2|References|225
1|References|227
1|Index|259