This book compares and contrasts traditional crime scenes with scenes of
climate crisis to offer a more expansive definition of crime which
includes environmental harm. The authors reconsider what crime scenes
have always included and might come to include in the age of the
Anthropocene - a new geological era where humans have made enough
significant alterations to the global environment to warrant a
fundamental rethinking of human-nonhuman relations. In each of the
chapters, the authors reframe enduringly popular Arctic scenes, such as
iceberg hunting, cruising and polar bear watching, as specific criminal
anthroposcenes. By reading climate scenes in this way, the authors aim
to productively deploy the representation of crime to make these scenes
more engaging to policymakers and ordinary viewers. Criminal
Anthroposcenes brings together insights from criminology, climate
change communication, and tourism studies in order to study the
production and consumption of media representations of Arctic climate
change in the hope of to mobilizing more urgent public and policy
responses to climate change.