Abstract

While green criminologists note that environmental crimes are taken less seriously than street crimes by law enforcement and the criminal justice system, the diffuse structure of the environmental regulatory regime in the United States and lack of governmental databases makes empirical assessment of environmental crimes and enforcement efforts particularly difficult. This article builds on a need in the green criminological literature to empirically assess the distribution and prosecution of environmental crimes in the United States, by focusing on the underserved area of the U.S. states. Using content analysis of 972 federal environmental crime prosecutions 2001–2011, this article explores the nature and geography of these crimes and subsequent prosecutions within and across the U.S. states. Our findings show a wide distribution of crimes and prosecutions occurring across the states, with Clean Air and Clean Water violations being particularly prevalent. We also find a weak trend between prosecutions and both the amount of pollution and number of environmental groups per state, but the small number of cases and limitations of the data make drawing firm conclusions difficult. These findings show an increased need to build databases to understand the prevalence of environmental crimes and the prosecution of those offenses in the U.S. states.

Highlights

  • While green criminologists note that environmental crimes are taken less seriously than street crimes by law enforcement and the criminal justice system, the diffuse structure of the environmental regulatory regime in the United States and lack of governmental databases makes empirical assessment of environmental crimes and enforcement efforts difficult

  • While theorizing and describing the causes of green crime has been an early goal of green criminologists, describing the extent of green crimes locally or comparatively can be difficult, as there are no uniform or national statistics in the United States regarding the prevalence of environmental crimes (Gibbs and Simpson, 2009)

  • Given the lack of data on green crimes in the United States, green criminologists and other scholars often turn to the examination of certain types of available data to get an idea of the universe of green/environmental crimes

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Summary

Introduction

While green criminologists note that environmental crimes are taken less seriously than street crimes by law enforcement and the criminal justice system, the diffuse structure of the environmental regulatory regime in the United States and lack of governmental databases makes empirical assessment of environmental crimes and enforcement efforts difficult. This manuscript begins with an overview of the green criminological literature, followed by a discussion of the nature of federal environmental crime prosecutions in the United States, and provides a description of the data, research design, and findings.

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