RT Article T1 Three ecologies, transversality and victimization: the case of the British Petroleum oil spill JF Crime, law and social change VO 59 IS 2 SP 209 OP 223 A1 Spencer, Dale C. A2 Fitzgerald, Amy J. LA English YR 2013 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1854290576 AB A number of critiques of the burgeoning field of green criminology have recently been articulated in the literature. The aim of this article is to begin to demonstrate what green criminological work responsive to these critiques might look like. The two primary critiques we are concerned with here are (1) that there has been little intellectual sharing between the fields of green criminology and victimology, and (2) that green criminological work has failed to be reflexive about the modernist assumptions it has largely adhered to. In response to these critiques, we draw on the theorizing of poststructuralist Felix Guattari to analyze the various interrelated layers of victimization in the 2010 British Petroleum oil spill case in the Gulf of Mexico. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 221-223 K1 Corporate Crime K1 Corporate Social Responsibility K1 Environmental Crime K1 Environmental Ecology K1 Nonhuman Animal DO 10.1007/s10611-013-9422-5