It goes on to suggest three possible points of unity between green criminology and abolition ecology. The paper outlines its abolitionist theoretical framework, and then identifies some benefits of a green criminological orientation. The paper works to bring together these linked perspectives, asking how green criminology might contribute to abolition ecology. This paper offers a green criminological rejoinder to the bourgeoning project of ‘abolition ecology’. Green criminology is a field well-placed to explore such radical possibilities (Bradshaw in Crit Criminol 26:407–422, 2018). ‘Abolition ecology’ presents an approach through which to explore, unravel and resist racial capitalism and environmental racism as interlocking and mutually generative systems (Heynen in Abolit A J Insurg Polit 1:240–247, 2018a Pulido in Prog Hum Geogr 41:524–533, 2017). Heynen and Ybarra in Antipode 53:21–35, 2021 Pellow 2021 Pulido and De Lara in Environ Plan E Nat Space 1:76–98, 2018 AAA = Brock and Stephens-Griffin, IDS Bulletin, 2017). Recent debates in political ecology have sought to highlight and excavate the complex connectivity between ecological and carceral harms (e.g.
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