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Researching transnational environmental harm: toward an eco-global criminology

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 01:39 authored by Robert WhiteRobert White
The study of transnational environmental harm demands appreciation of specific methodological and conceptual issues that impinge upon the data collection process. Some of these issues include the ethics and politics of ‘outsiders’ researching other people’s territory, the differential availability and types of data in different jurisdictions, the ways in which state denial and corporate resistance impede the research process, and the importance of utilising a wide range of data sources as a means to substantiate claims about harms and the causes of harms. The paper presents an exploration of methodological issues in the study of harms that are global, cross-national, and/or localised, but which are intrinsically transnational in nature regardless of scale and scope. By understanding the challenges presented to those working in this area, we are also able to identify directions for future methodological development.

History

Publication title

International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice

Volume

33

Pagination

229-248

ISSN

0192-4036

Department/School

School of Social Sciences

Publisher

Michigan State University

Place of publication

Michigan

Rights statement

Copyright 2009 Michigan State University

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Criminal justice

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