Sollund, Ragnhild
University of Oslo

Ragnhild Sollund is a professor of criminology at the University of Oslo, dept. of Criminology and Sociology of Law. She has written extensively on topics such as migration and police racial profiling. The past decade she has specialised in green criminology, particularly issues concerning wildlife management and exploitation, animal abuse and animal rights. She is the author and editor of many articles and books, such as The crimes of wildlife trafficking. Issues of justice, legality and morality (Routledge 2019), Green harms and crimes. Critical Criminology in a changing world. (Palgrave 2015) and Global Harms. Ecological crime and speciesism (Nova science publishers 2008). She is currently conducting a research project funded by the Research Council, Norway, CRIMEANTHROP where the research team explores the implementation of the CITES and Berne convention and wildlife use and management in four countries; Norway, UK, Germany and Spain.
Contributions
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Eating E.T.: Carnism and Speciesism
Articles
Online First
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The Norway–Colombia Agreement to Protect Rainforest and Reduce Global Warming: Success or Failure?
Articles
Vol. 8 No. 3 (2019)
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Contesting and Contextualising CITES: Wildlife Trafficking in Colombia and Brazil
Articles
Vol. 5 No. 4 (2016)
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Special Issue. Towards Global Green Criminological Dialogues: Voices from the Americas and Europe. Guest Editors' Introduction
Editorial
Vol. 8 No. 3 (2019)