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Ecocide, climate criminals and the politics of bushfires

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-23, 02:31 authored by Reece WaltersReece Walters
Abstract Throughout the last thirty years bushfires or wildfires have increased globally with devastating impacts on ecosystems, human habitats and greenhouse gas emissions. The recording of unprecedented temperatures coupled with the warming of international oceans, and the melting of polar icecaps from anthropocentric climate change are major contributors to the increase of global wildfires that are forecasted to worsen unless urgent political intervention reduces greenhouse gas emissions. The state and corporate actors that enable widespread toxic emissions have been referred to as ‘climate criminals’ within discourses of ecocide and green criminology. This article adopts a green criminological lens to the emerging concept of ‘ecocide’ to examine political leaders and their mismanagement of devastating bushfires. Through a detailed interrogation of Australia’s Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements it traces the devastating Summer events of 2019/2020 and concludes that political inaction underpinned by fossil fuel economic priorities were instrumental in creating the contexts for a preventable environmental and human catastrophe.

History

Journal

The British Journal of Criminology

Pagination

1-21

Location

Oxford, Eng.

ISSN

0007-0955

eISSN

1464-3529

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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