Abstract
One of the more neglected areas of research in the field of criminology are the crimes committed by 'white collar' offenders. An even more understudied area is the corporate crimes that are committed against the environment for profit. Despite this dearth of research, there have been several sociologically significant examinations into some of the more serious environmental crimes committed over the last three decades. While some of this research is theoretically underdeveloped, more recent studies have attempted to develop a coherent framework to study environmental crime. By linking and synthesizing two literatures in both white-collar criminology and environmental justice, sociologists have begun to develop a framework for examining 'green crimes', the motivations, opportunity context, victimology, and enforcement issues. This article will be a survey of these studies and development literature along with some typological and definitional issues relevant to the subfield. This aims to map where criminology has been in the sub-field of environmental crime and provides directions for where future research should be headed. © 2011 The Author. Sociology Compass © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Wolf, B. (2011). “Green-Collar Crime”: Environmental Crime and Justice in the Sociological Perspective. Sociology Compass, 5(7), 499–511. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-9020.2011.00381.x
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