Green Criminology

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Across
  1. 4. The driving force of green crime and environmental harms
  2. 5. Term used by Green Criminologists describing deliberate environmental destruction
  3. 6. Criminologist/theorist thought to have first introduced Green Criminology to the field
  4. 8. A wrongdoing that is committed by the knowingly and intentionally by the defendant (ex. Improper waste disposal, illegal plant operation, possession/trade of protected wild animals)
Down
  1. 1. A common critique of Green Criminology; often seen as too _____
  2. 2. Work done by activists
  3. 3. The field of Criminology concerned with environmental crimes and harms that affect human and non-human life, ecosystems, and the planet as a whole Green Criminology
  4. 6. Regulations, legislation that would prevent or reduce environmental crime
  5. 7. Anything that harms the environment, but is not considered a criminal act (ex. Air pollution, deforestation, greenwashing)