Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson

Since the 1980s, the incidence of wildfires (forest fires), across the World has significantly increased (Jensen) and climate change has been implicated in this trend (UNEP). In recent years, major wild fires have occurred in the United States, Canada, Australia, Indonesia, Latin America, Spain, Por...

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Main Authors: Cozens, Paul, Christensen, W.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Perpetuity Press 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28769
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author Cozens, Paul
Christensen, W.
author_facet Cozens, Paul
Christensen, W.
author_sort Cozens, Paul
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Since the 1980s, the incidence of wildfires (forest fires), across the World has significantly increased (Jensen) and climate change has been implicated in this trend (UNEP). In recent years, major wild fires have occurred in the United States, Canada, Australia, Indonesia, Latin America, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Iran, Russia and most recently, in Israel. In Australia, wildfires or forest fires are known as bushfires, and approximately 60 000 occur each year. Only 6 per cent are ‘natural fires’, while 90 per cent are the result of people's actions. Significantly, deliberate ignitions; incendiary (maliciously lit fires) and suspicious fires account for 50 per cent of known fire causes (Bryant). Internationally, research in the field of bushfire arson prevention is currently dominated by offender-based approaches, which largely rely on incomplete and limited insights from a minority (less than 1 per cent) of arsonists who have been apprehended (Ogloff Tomison and Jones). This article explores how theories from environmental criminology can be used to understand and analyse place-based factors associated with deliberately lit bushfires. It also presents findings from a recent workshop conducted at the Australian Symposium on Bushfire Arson Prevention in order to further contextualise the relevance of environmental criminology to the analysis and reduction of bushfire arson.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-287692017-09-13T15:16:37Z Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson Cozens, Paul Christensen, W. Since the 1980s, the incidence of wildfires (forest fires), across the World has significantly increased (Jensen) and climate change has been implicated in this trend (UNEP). In recent years, major wild fires have occurred in the United States, Canada, Australia, Indonesia, Latin America, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Iran, Russia and most recently, in Israel. In Australia, wildfires or forest fires are known as bushfires, and approximately 60 000 occur each year. Only 6 per cent are ‘natural fires’, while 90 per cent are the result of people's actions. Significantly, deliberate ignitions; incendiary (maliciously lit fires) and suspicious fires account for 50 per cent of known fire causes (Bryant). Internationally, research in the field of bushfire arson prevention is currently dominated by offender-based approaches, which largely rely on incomplete and limited insights from a minority (less than 1 per cent) of arsonists who have been apprehended (Ogloff Tomison and Jones). This article explores how theories from environmental criminology can be used to understand and analyse place-based factors associated with deliberately lit bushfires. It also presents findings from a recent workshop conducted at the Australian Symposium on Bushfire Arson Prevention in order to further contextualise the relevance of environmental criminology to the analysis and reduction of bushfire arson. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28769 10.1057/cpcs.2010.24 Perpetuity Press restricted
spellingShingle Cozens, Paul
Christensen, W.
Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
title Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
title_full Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
title_fullStr Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
title_full_unstemmed Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
title_short Environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
title_sort environmental criminology and the potential for reducing opportunities for bushfire arson
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28769