Ecologies of Justice

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activism
agriculture
carceral geography
carceral studies
Category=JBCC4
Category=JKVP
climate change
community corrections
correctional programs
corrections
crime prevention
crime survivors
crime victims
criminal justice
criminal justice reform
criminology
culture
eco-social
eco-social healing
ecology studies
environment
environment and ecology
environmental activism
environmental education
environmental justice
environmental leaders
environmental studies
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
food justice
forthcoming
gardens
green criminology
green infrastructure
green jobs
green prisons
justice
law
leaders
lived experience
natural environments
nature
nature-based therapy
pipelines
prison abolition
prisoners
prisons
psychosocial interventions
reentry
restorative justice
social ecology
social environment
social interventions
society
sociology
sustainability in prisons
sustainable communities
therapeutic horticulture

Product details

  • ISBN 9781978840324
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Rutgers University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What is the role of multi-species ecologies in creating spaces that counteract the violence in carceral systems and environmental destruction? This book brings together, for the first time, contributions on issues related to prison, jail, and reentry programs, community-based interventions, environmental justice, and sustainability. Through rigorous analysis, detailed case studies, poetry, and personal reflections, the book offers ways of thinking and acting at the intersection of environmental issues and the carceral system. It gathers hard-earned wisdom and insight of researchers, activists, practitioners, and community leaders from within and beyond prison walls who have taken up their projects despite profound institutional constraints.

Approaches in the book range from reform to abolition, as authors detail both practical interventions and imaginative courses of action. More than a contribution to academic knowledge, the book also uniquely highlights voices of those who are incarcerated, survivors of crime, and institutional stakeholders. In addition to writing about the carceral system based on research and personal experience, authors describe practices that are creating transformative spaces of environmental education, building effective pipelines for green workforce development, and sustaining reciprocal relationships for eco-social healing.

Matthew DelSesto is the coordinator for the Initiative for Community Justice and Engaged Pedagogy at Boston College where he also teaches in the sociology department. He has worked as an educator in prisons and jails for more than twelve years and developed a number of collaborative projects with community-based organizations. His research and practice have been funded by the National Science Foundation, Hearst Foundations, and Center for Human Rights and International Justice. He is the author of Design and the Social Imagination (2022).

Daniela Jauk-Ajamie is an assistant professor of sociology and criminal justice studies at the University of Akron, Ohio. She is a certified clinical sociologist and serves on the board of the American Association of Applied and Clinical Sociology (AACS). She co-authored the book Gardening Behind Bars: Clinical Sociology and Food Justice in Incarcerated Settings (2024).

Elizabeth Lara currently works as a garden educator, Dodger Stadium tour guide (with a specialization on the botanic garden tour), a facilitator for a domestic violence intervention program, and a freelance gardener. Her academic research focuses on gardens and horticultural history in current and former sites of incarceration in California. Her work "Prison Gardens and Growing Abolition" has been published in the edited collection The Promise of Multispecies Justice (2022).

Shea Zwerver works to bring nature to carceral settings, increase access to nature to promote prosocial behavior, and improve quality of life through equity-driven practices. From 2016 to 2022, she served in multiple roles with Pennsylvania's Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. There, she conceptualized and coordinated a vocational and educational training program–the "Correctional Conservation Collaboration" at state prisons in arboriculture, forestry, and natural resource conservation.