ABSTRACT

Building on original research into the petroleum industry and on the theory of crimes of globalization, this book introduces the concept of Market Criminology: the criminology of preventable market-generated harms and the criminogenic effects of market rationality in variegated forms of capitalism.

Ifeanyi Ezeonu explores the ascendance of the fundamentalist form of market economy in Nigeria; the complicity of the state political and security apparatuses in the corporate expropriation of the country's petroleum resource wealth; the deleterious effects of this neoliberal architecture on the local population, as well as community resistance strategies over the years. This book offers a major contribution to research on state-corporate crime and the crimes of the powerful.

Key reading for scholars and students in the areas of criminology, international political economy and sociology, this book will also be rich resource for researchers and non-governmental agencies working in the areas of environmental protection, human rights and sustainable development in the Global South, especially the Sub-Saharan Africa.

chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|27 pages

“In the long run we are all dead”

Historicizing our journey to a market society

chapter 4|32 pages

Market criminology

An ontological recalibration of a discipline

chapter 5|37 pages

Petroleum resources and the plunder of the Niger Delta

Lessons on Market Criminology

chapter 6|17 pages

Public security challenges in the Niger Delta

The catharsis of community resistance

chapter 7|6 pages

Conclusion

Extending the periscope of criminology to market rationality