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Samenvatting
This article discusses tropical deforestation from a cultural criminological perspective, by using qualitative methods such as ethnography and interviews, and by emphasizing the difficulties, dangers and dilemmas of ethnographic research. Case studies include timber smuggling from Indonesia to Malaysia and deforestation for bauxite, soy and timber in Brazil’s Amazon. Also described are meetings with (Dutch) timber traders, policy makers and law enforcers. Tropical deforestation is responsible for a great deal of harm, crime and violence, mainly committed by ranchers and loggers. Victims are humans (including humanity’s oldest societies), future generations (considering the impact on greenhouse gas emissions and climate change) and non-humans (with risks of extinctions).
Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit |
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| Artikel | Etnografie en criminologie in het tropisch regenwoud |
| Trefwoorden | green criminology, ethnography, rainforests, illegal logging |
| Auteurs | Tim Boekhout van Solinge |
| Auteursinformatie |
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