Bringing together a range of multidisciplinary chapters at the cutting edge of environmental thinking and rethinking in criminology, this book explores what the Anthropocene suggests for the theory and future practice of the discipline
Cameron Holley is Associate Professor and Co-Director of Postgraduate Studies and manager/team leader of the Connected Waters Initiative Research Centre and the Global Water Institute at the University of New South Wales.
Clifford Shearing holds professorships at the Universities of Cape Town, Griffith and Montreal and positions at the University of New South Wales and the Durban University of Technology.
1. Thriving on a Pale Blue Dot: Criminology and the Anthropocene, Cameron Holley and Clifford Shearing, 2. Autosarcophagy in the Anthropocene and the Obscenity of an Epoch, Avi Brisman and Nigel South, 3. Carbon Criminals, Ecocide and Climate Justice, Rob White, 4. Moving Towards Ecological Regulation: The Role of Criminalisation, Fiona Haines and Christine Parker, 5. Bentham in the Anthropocene: Imagining a Sustainable Criminal Justice, Pat O'Malley, 6. Cities, Walls and the Anthropocene: When Consciousness and Purpose Fail to Coincide, Monique Marks, Rachel Matteau Matsha and Andrew Caruso, 7. Temporalities in Security: Long-Term Sustainability, the Everyday and the Emergent in the Anthropocene, Adam Crawford, 8. Politics of Anthropocene and Lessons for Criminology, Janet Chan