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Green Criminology

Green Criminology. Based on research by M. Lynch & P. Stretsky and Routledge. Social Construction of Crime . Like other crimes, green criminology is a social construction Influenced by: social locations Power relations in society Definitions of environmental crimes Media

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Green Criminology

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  1. Green Criminology Based on research by M. Lynch & P. Stretsky and Routledge

  2. Social Construction of Crime • Like other crimes, green criminology is a social construction • Influenced by: • social locations • Power relations in society • Definitions of environmental crimes • Media • Political process

  3. Corporate vs. Environmental Justice • Two very different definitions on what it means “to be green.” • 1970s was a time of political activism aimed at environmental protection

  4. Corporate Definition • 1990s was supposed to be the decade of the environment • But things didn’t quite go as planned…..

  5. The involvement of corporations actually sidetracked the movement • Corporations were able to influence the social construction of green through the use of public relations and the mass media

  6. This version was: mild less radical de-political zed vision

  7. Stressed consumption rather than production issues • A human could become “green” just by buying the correct products • This was known as “greenwashing” • This enabled corporations to defuse and redirect support for environment

  8. Why did corporations do this? • Radical environmental positions were a threat to corporations • They wanted “business as usual.”

  9. An example of “business as usual” • Love Canal near Niagara Falls • In the 1940s Love Canal was an abandoned navigation channel • For years Hooker Chemical dumped thousands of drums filled with toxic chemical waste directly into the canal

  10. In 1952 the canal was covered up • A year later Hooker Company sold the land to the Niagara Falls Board of Education • A school was built

  11. In the 1970s Niagara Falls experienced a season of very heavy rain • Chemicals began to seep up onto the school grounds and neighboring homes, including their basements

  12. Federal and state officials investigated and found: • 88 separate chemicals, some in concentrations 250 to 5,000 times higher than acceptable safety levels • 11 of the 88 were known carcinogens

  13. This case received massive media attention • Though Hooker Company had a total disregard for the environment or future generations they had not broken any law • Since then new laws have been passed…

  14. Though many were then reversed by the Reagan administration

  15. The “greenwashing” continues • Chevron has commercials proclaiming they care about the environment • Just look at all they have done for the El Segundo Blue Butterfly • Of course, the butterfly would have been safe if its habitat was not on top of the U.S.’s largest underground oil spill

  16. Environmental Justice (EJ) • Three major types of EJ • Ecofeminism • Environmental racism • Red-green movement

  17. Ecofeminism • Began in the 1970s • Criticized capitalist profit-growth orientation and the patriarchy • Connects the domination and exploitation of nature with the domination and exploitation of women

  18. Argues that women are more concerned with survival than men • It has been shown that women do put more money back into their own communities than their male counterparts

  19. Ecofeminism can be achieved by • Reorienting cultural values • Returning to small-scale local economies • And grass root democracy

  20. Environmental Racism • Simultaneously advocates EJ and the elimination of racial discrimination in environmental decisions • Argues that toxic factories, pollution and waste sites affect communities of color more than Caucasians

  21. Short term goals: race-linked theory and action • Long term goals: • Elimination of exposure to dangerous products and practices for all

  22. Union Carbide Chemical plant in Bhopal, India • December 1984 • The world’s worst environmental accident occurred • (Chernobyl was a close 1st runner up)

  23. The plant used highly toxic chemicals in its production process • Water somehow got mixed into the toxic chemicals • An explosion occurred

  24. It is estimated that more than 6,000 humans died as a result of this “accident” • 60,000 other humans were seriously affected by the toxic gases • Over 20,000 of which who were permanently injured as a result of the exposure

  25. It is argued that far fewer humans would have died if…… • The plant had not been located so close to the shanty towns of the poor

  26. The true extent of the damage will not be known for twenty or more years • This could affect birth defects in upcoming generations • Impact the natural environment and wildlife

  27. Red-green movement • Relates economic oppression to environmental degradation • In a class society environmental problems are more likely to impact the working class and the poor • Example?

  28. Goal: Ecological Socialism • A method of simultaneously eliminating environmentally destructive • Unsustainable production practices • Exploitative mode of production

  29. All three are connected

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