TY - JOUR AU - Rob White, Hannah Graham AB - This article examines the growth of ecological awareness, alongside the emergence of environmental sustainability initiatives, within criminal justice institutions around the world. To date, such developments have received little empirical analysis from criminology scholars. Internationally, this article is among the first to critically analyse the ‘greening’ of policing, courts, prisons, offender supervision and community reintegration. Available literature and examples are reviewed, alongside original research findings. The motivations and ideologies underpinning this nascent green evolution raise deeper questions of ‘why?’ and ‘for whom?’ Innovative examples of sustainable justice architecture and catalysts for penal reform are differentiated from those which claim humanistic intentions and green credentials but, arguably, are based on instrumental fiscal motives that do little to challenge repressive carceral regimes. Keywords: Key words greening justice sustainability rehabilitation penal reform © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies (ISTD). All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com « Previous | Next Article » Table of Contents This Article Br J Criminol (2015) 55 (5): 845-865. doi: 10.1093/bjc/azu117 First published online: February 3, 2015 » Abstract Free Full Text (HTML) Free Full Text (PDF) Free All Versions of this Article: azu117v1 55/5/845 most recent Classifications Series: Featured Article Services Article metrics Alert me when cited Alert me if corrected Find similar articles Similar articles in Web of Science Add to my archive Download citation Request Permissions Citing Articles Load citing article information Citing articles via CrossRef Citing articles via Scopus Citing articles via Web of Science Google Scholar Articles by White, R. Articles by Graham, H. 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Search this journal: Advanced » Current Issue September 2015 55 (5) Alert me to new issues The Journal About this journal Reviewing Policy Publishers' Books for Review Rights & Permissions Dispatch date of the next issue We are mobile – find out more This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) Journals Career Network Published on behalf of Centre for Crime & Justice Studies Impact factor: 1.442 5-Yr impact factor: 1.816 Eigenfactor: 0.00436 Article Influence score: 1.048 Editor Sandra Walklate View full editorial board For Authors Instructions to authors Self archiving policy Alerting Services Email table of contents Email Advance Access CiteTrack XML RSS feed Corporate Services Advertising sales Reprints Supplements Widget Get a widget var taxonomies = ("SOC00550"); Most Most Read Cyberhate on Social Media in the aftermath of Woolwich: A Case Study in Computational Criminology and Big Data Greening Justice: Examining the Interfaces of Criminal, Social and Ecological Justice Policing Humanitarian Borderlands: Frontex, Human Rights and the Precariousness of Life Value Judgments and Criminalization The International Ban on Ivory Sales and its Effects on Elephant Poaching in Africa » View all Most Read articles Most Cited THE LIMITS OF THE SOVEREIGN STATE: Strategies of Crime Control in Contemporary Society Government and Control CONFLICTS AS PROPERTY Public Confidence in Policing: A Neo-Durkheimian Perspective CONDITIONS OF SUCCESSFUL REINTEGRATION CEREMONIES: Dealing with Juvenile Offenders » View all Most Cited articles Disclaimer: Please note that abstracts for content published before 1996 were created through digital scanning and may therefore not exactly replicate the text of the original print issues. 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