ABSTRACT

49% of the world’s population lives in small towns, villages and farms, yet until recent years criminological scholarship has focused almost exclusively on urban crimes. The Routledge International Handbook of Rural Criminology is the first major publication to bring together this growing body of scholarship under a single cover. For many years rural criminology has remained marginalized and often excluded from the mainstream, with precedence given to urban criminology: this volume intends to address that imbalance.

Pioneering in scope, this book brings together leading international scholars from fourteen different countries to offer an authoritative synthesis of theoretical and empirical literature. This handbook is divided in to seven parts, each addressing a different aspect of rural criminology:

  • Rurality and crime
  • Criminological dimensions of food and agriculture
  • Violence and rurality
  • Drug use, production and trafficking in the rural context
  • Intersections between rural and green criminology
  • Policing, justice and rurality
  • Teaching rural criminology

Edited by a world renowned scholar of rural criminology, this book explores rural crime issues in over thirty-five countries including Japan, Sweden, Brazil, Australia, Tanzania, the US, and the UK. This is the first Handbook dedicated to rural criminology and is an essential resource for criminologists, sociologists and social geographers engaged with rural studies and crime.

section 1|91 pages

Rurality and crime

chapter 6|9 pages

The importance of context

Understanding the nature of antisocial behaviour in rural Scotland

chapter 7|9 pages

From myth to myth

Rural criminology in France

chapter 8|9 pages

Rural prostitution

chapter 9|8 pages

Homies of the corn

Gangs in the rural environment 1

chapter 10|9 pages

The nomadic pastoralist, the fisherman and the pirate

A historical overview of the rural dimensions of piracy in Somalia

section 2|63 pages

Criminological dimensions of food and agriculture

chapter 11|9 pages

Farm victimisation

The quintessential rural crime

chapter 12|9 pages

Agricultural crime in Africa

Trends and perspectives*

chapter 13|10 pages

Criminal farmers and organised rural crime groups

A UK case study

chapter 14|9 pages

Understanding farm animal abuse

Legal and extra-legal factors

chapter 15|9 pages

Human trafficking, labor exploitation and exposure to environmental hazards

The abuse of farmworkers in the US

section 3|65 pages

Violence and rurality

section 4|51 pages

Drug use, production and trafficking in the rural context

chapter 24|8 pages

Rural adolescent substance use

Community causes and cures

chapter 25|11 pages

The rural context of substance misuse in the United States

Emerging adult patterns and local perceptions following the Great Recession 1

chapter 26|9 pages

Approaching rural drug issues from the perspective of community psychology

The relevance of community-mindedness in peer-oriented intervention

section 5|65 pages

The intersection of rural and green criminologies

chapter 28|9 pages

Fractured earth, forced labour

A green criminological analysis of rights and the exploitation of landscapes and workers in rural contexts

chapter 31|9 pages

Illegal hunting

Between social and criminal justice

chapter 33|11 pages

Jumping from the frying pan into the fire

A criminological study of forest fire-setting in Spain

section 6|78 pages

Policing, justice and rurality

chapter 34|10 pages

Policing rural Indigenous communities

An examination of practices in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States

chapter 38|10 pages

Policing rural Canada

section 7|19 pages

Teaching rural criminology