» Articles » PMID: 35206877

Environment, Environmental Crimes, Environmental Forensic Medicine, Environmental Risk Management and Environmental Criminology

Overview
Specialty Health Services
Date 2022 Feb 25
PMID 35206877
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Forensic medicine has always held the human environment, either seen as a source for pathological agents or the background of judicial events, in great consideration. The concept of the environment has evolved through time, expanding itself to include all the physical and virtual sub-spaces in which we exist. We can nowadays talk of technoenvironmental reality; virtual spaces exploded because of the COVID-19 pandemic making us come to terms with the fact that those are the places where we work, where we socialize and, even, where we meet our doctors and can be cured. Artificial Intelligence (AI) has contributed to shaping new virtual realities that have got their own rules yet to be discovered, carved and respected. We already fight a daily battle to save our natural environment: along with the danger of green crimes, comes the need for environmental justice and environmental forensic medicine that will probably develop a forensic branch and an experimental branch, to implement our technical culture leading to definition of the real dimension of the risk itself to improve the role of legal medicine in the Environmental Risk Management. While green criminology addresses widespread green crimes, a virtual environment criminology will also develop, maybe with a contribution of AI in the justice field. For a sustainable life, the environmental revolution must rapidly take place, and there is the need for a new justice, a new forensic medicine and a new criminology too.

References
1.
Wyatt T, Maher J, Allen D, Clarke N, Rook D . The welfare of wildlife: an interdisciplinary analysis of harm in the legal and illegal wildlife trades and possible ways forward. Crime Law Soc Change. 2021; 77(1):69-89. PMC: 8373290. DOI: 10.1007/s10611-021-09984-9. View

2.
Mehrpour O, Akbari A, Jahani F, Amirabadizadeh A, Allahyari E, Mansouri B . Epidemiological and clinical profiles of acute poisoning in patients admitted to the intensive care unit in eastern Iran (2010 to 2017). BMC Emerg Med. 2018; 18(1):30. PMC: 6146606. DOI: 10.1186/s12873-018-0181-6. View

3.
Wyatt T . Canada and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES): Lessons Learned on Implementation and Compliance. Liverp Law Rev. 2020; 42(2):143-159. PMC: 7539754. DOI: 10.1007/s10991-020-09267-8. View

4.
Ornillo C, Harbord N . Fundaments of Toxicology-Approach to the Poisoned Patient. Adv Chronic Kidney Dis. 2020; 27(1):5-10. DOI: 10.1053/j.ackd.2019.12.001. View

5.
Buckley N . Poisoning and epidemiology: 'toxicoepidemiology'. Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol. 1998; 25(3-4):195-203. DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1681.1998.t01-5-.x. View