Contents: Introduction; Part I Thinking about Transnational Environmental Crime: Transnational environmental crime: exploring (un)charted territory, Liselotte Bisschop; Conceptualising and combating transnational environmental crime, Glen Wright; The global transference of toxic harms, Diane Heckenberg; Causes for speciesism: difference, distance and denial, Ragnhild Sollund; Dire forecast: a theoretical model of the impact of climate change on crime, Robert Agnew; Where might we be headed? Some of the possible consequences of climate change for the criminological research agenda, Stephen Farrall. Part II Conflicts, Victimisation and the Environment: Cross-national environmental injustice and human rights issues: a review of evidence in the developing world, Francis O. Adeola; Environmental disputes and human rights violations: a role for criminologists, Richard D. Clark; When social movements bypass the poor: asbestos pollution, international litigation and Griqua cultural identity, Linda Waldman; Deforestation crimes and conflicts in the Amazon, Tim Boekhout van Solinge; Toward defining the concept of environmental crime on the basis of sustainability, Ali Mohamed Al-Damkhi, Ali Mohamed Khuraibet, Sabah Ahmed Abdul-Wahab and Faten Abdul-Hameed Al-Attar. Part III Pollution and Waste: Green criminology and dirty collar crime, Vincenzo Ruggiero and Nigel South; Is it all going to waste? Illegal transports of e-waste in a European trade hub, Liselot Bisschop; International waste trafficking: preliminary explorations, Ana KlenovA!ek and Goradz MeA!ko; Conservation criminology and the global trade in electronic waste: applying a multi-disciplinary research framework, Carole Gibbs, Edmund F. McGarrell, Mark Axelrod and Louie Rivers III; Toxic atmospheres: air pollution, trade and the politics of regulation, Reece Walters. Part IV Biodiversity and Wildlife Crime: The 'corporate colonisation of nature': bio-prospecting, bio-piracy and the development of green criminolo