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OverviewThis book expands the growing field of punishment ecology and advances an environmental theory of punishment that centralises Nature as a political force capable of exercising penal power. In dialogue with posthumanist and new materialist thought, Punishment unsettles Western philosophy’s casting of nature as a passive, inert backdrop to human action. Instead, it foregrounds a Nature that resists, recalibrates in response to, and co-produces social practice. This book asks what role this creative, responsive, more-than-human nature plays in both the practice and lived experience of criminal punishment. Centring chemical and fungal agency, Punishment disrupts conventional legal narratives surrounding prisoner illness and the lethal injection, revealing how contemporary forms of penal power are entangled with the political economies of colonialism, racial capitalism, industrial agriculture, and resource extractivism. In bringing these entanglements into sharper focus, this book develops an ethics of punishment that moves beyond the individual and institutional frames of traditional sociolegal approaches to show how penal power is not only environmentally distributed but proliferates through material systems in ways that blur the spatial and temporal boundaries through which we typically organise the world and imagine our place within it. This book will be a key text for criminologists, sociologists, jurists, and others interested in criminal law and penal theory. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sabrina GilaniPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge ISBN: 9781032434889ISBN 10: 1032434880 Pages: 132 Publication Date: 27 April 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of Contents1. What is Punishment 2. Posthuman Bodies and Lively Nature 3. Fungal Normativity and Prisoner Disease 4. (Capital) Punishment in the Chemosphere 5. Posthuman PunishmentReviewsAuthor InformationSabrina Gilani is Associate Professor in Law at the University of Sussex in Brighton, U.K. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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