Eco-crime and freshwater
Contribuinte(s) |
Hall, Matthew |
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Data(s) |
2016
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Resumo |
The unsustainable and exploitative use of one of the most important but scarce resources on the planet - freshwater - continues to create conflict and human dislocation on a grand scale. Instead of witnessing nation-states adopting more equitable and efficient conservation strategies, powerful corporations are permitted to privatise and monopolise diminishing water reservoirs based on flawed neo-liberal assumptions and market models of the ‘global good’. The commodification of water has enabled corporate monopolies and corrupt states to exploit a fundamental human right, and in the process have created new forms of criminality. In recent years, affluent industrialised nations have experienced violent rioting as protestors express opposition to government ‘freshwater taxes’ and to corporate investors seeking to privatise drinking water. These water conflicts have included unprecedented clashes with police and deaths of innocent civilians in South Africa (BBC News, 2014a); the United Nations intervention in Detroit USA after weeks of public protest (Burns, 2014); and the hundreds of thousands of people protesting in Ireland (BBC News, 2014,b; Irish Times 2015). Subsequently, the commodification of freshwater has become a criminological issue for water-abundant rich states, as well as for the highly indebted water-scarce nations. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Ashgate |
Relação |
Johnson, Hope, South, Nigel, & Walters, Reece (2016) Eco-crime and freshwater. In Hall, Matthew (Ed.) Greening Criminology. Ashgate, Aldershot, England. (In Press) |
Fonte |
Faculty of Law; Institute for Future Environments; Law and Justice Research Centre; School of Justice; School of Law |
Palavras-Chave | #Green Criminology #International Water Law #Eco-Crime #Fresh Water #Human Rights |
Tipo |
Book Chapter |