The need for lawmakers to look at the existing laws that govern criminology and look at it in a broader sense to include laws that deals with environmental crimes, because it does not affect just the environment but all living things be it plant animal or man.
The question whether green criminology should be considered a valid form of criminology or if it is limited to the green crimes?
The significant potential harms to the environment in terms of environmental pollution, and the depletion of wildlife which will have long lasting global effects on humans and animals in the future,
The unconventional way in which wildlife laws …show more content…
The red green movement, takes a Marxist view that environmental problems affects the working and poor class due to decision making at the top level which excluded the working class, effectively freeing them from environmental concerns.
The author made some good points but, in actuality green crimes have been existing for some time now. The few that may have spoken out about it in the sixties and seventies were ridiculed.
The society was on an industrial revolution, and the focus was on wealth, development, and the use of abundant reserves available, (at least what seemed like an abundant