Animal/Food/Farm by Year[1] 2005 2006 2007 2008[2] 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014[3] 2015 2016[4] 2017 Totals
Environmental Crime[5]
Environmental "Terrorism" 1[6] 2 1 1 1 2 1[7] 1 1 11
Environmental Radicals 1[8] 2 1 1[9] 5
Environmental Victims 2[10] 1 1 4
Toxins and Crime 1 1 1[11] 1[12] 4
Green Criminology 1 1[13]
Animals
Violence/Delinquency and Animal Abuse  1 2 2 1 2 1 3 1 1 3 17
Animal Abuse and Domestic Violence 2[14] 1 1 1 1 6
Animals as Victims 1[15] 1[16] 1[17] 1[18] 4
Animal Trafficking and Trade 1 3 2 5 11
Stolen Animals 1[19] 1
Animals as Status Symbols 1 1
Corrections-based Animal Programs 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 3 2 17
Animals and Gangs 1 1
Animal Cruelty/Laws/Data 1 1 1[20] 1 1 3 8
Animal Sexual Abuse 1 1
Animal Rights 1 1 2
Animal Trials 1 1
K-9 Police 1 1 2
Officers Shooting Non-humans 1 1
Animals - New Topics in 2017
Animal Abuse in CJ Textbooks 1
Social Media Highlighing Cruelty 1[21]
Veterinarians and the CJ System 1
Wildlife in Green Criminology 3[22]
Vegan Criminology 1
Totals 3 1 5 8 3 5 7 4 2 7 4 10 22
Food
Food Safety 1[23] 1[24] 1 1[25] 4
Food Crime 1[26] 1[27] 1 5[28] 4[29] 12
Food Criminology 1[30] 1
Corrections-based Food Programs 1 1 1 6[31] 9
Defiling of Food (workplace deviance) 1 1 2
Beer 1[32] 1
Food Insecurity[33]
Totals 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 3 3 6 11 2
Farming
Confined Animal Feeding 1[34] 1[35] 2
Factory Farms and Ag-Gag 1 1[36] 1[37] 3
Farm Crime - Victims 1[38] 5[39] 3 9
Farm Crime - Offenders 4[40] 4
Land Theft - Biopiracy 1[41] 2 3
Social Construction of Food 1[42] 1[43] 6[44] 8
Totals 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 4 2 15 6

[1]
Process was helpful in the effort to determine the scope of criminology research regarding animals and other related crimes/harms. What are the boundaries of  "Vegan Crimiology?"
[2]
several thematic sessions were included
[3]
ASC search changed, making "environment" less useful. May also pick up a couple extra due to searches of full abstracts rather than titles.
[4]
A very good year for anomals and food. Two thematic panels:

Criminology of Food and Agriculture PART I (Farm Victimisation)
Criminology of Food and Agricultural Part II (Farmers as Offenders)
[5]
Many papers on this topic, more recently, but difficult to categorize and often off topic.
[6]
We argue that this term is much more than a descriptor; it is also a tool employed by state and media agents to defend the dominant economic and political paradigm, and actively resisted (with very limited success) by some activists.
[7]
Threats From the Left: A Multivariate Analysis of Environmental and Animal Rights Extremism
[8]
"examine the statements and writings of radical environmentalists to assess the extent to which they use techniques of neutralization to justify their behaviors"
[9]
Policing of Activists
[10]
"Cases that feature nonhuman environmental victims (such as trees and other vegetation, endangered animals, and rivers) are examined as a means to demonstrate the increasing sophistication of the NSW LEC in dealing with such matters." Rob White

The second paper refers to impact of pollution on marine species, a broader form of victimization than previous papers.
[11]
"Toxic Towns" Rob White
[12]
Fast food and crime
[13]
"This paper provides a critical discussion of three interconnected justice-related approaches to harm: those pertaining to harm to humans (environmental justice), to environments (ecological justice) and to animals (species justice)." Rob White
[14]
Both papers discussed coexxistence. One discussed shelters for women and pets.

[15]
"victimology has embraced historical ideologies, including speciesist ones, and has systematically ignored specific victims of crimes and specific types of crimes alike"
[16]
animal victims of interpersonal relationships and hoarding - coexistence of animal abuse with domestic violence and child abuse. Also mentions animal hoarding.
[17]
"discuss why animal abuse became part of green criminology, different aspects of animal abuse, and how it can be analysed today"
[18]
Killer Whales or Whale Killers? A Routine Activities Analysis Introducing Agency Among Orca Whales During the Capture of Orca Calves
[19]
Stolen to be sold to labs.
[20]
typology  of animal cruelty
[21]
Animal Abuse in the 21st Century: The Role of Social Media in Highlighting Animal Cruelty
[22]
Thematic Panel: Wildlife and Green Criminology: Deconstructing Core Concepts
[23]
"Agroterrorism as a Potential Threat to the Nation's Food Supply"
[24]
"Environmental crime has been explored in criminology (Lynch and Stretesky 2003). A similar model can be applied to the food industry which is knowingly creating products that are harmful to the environment and consumers.
[25]
Antibiotics: The Nexus of State-Corporate Crime in Our Food Supply
[26]
counterfeiting food products
[27]
this paper was close to what I am discussing, but in regard to food in general - many justice themes related to food, counterfeit food, human trafficking, illegal fishing, toxic waste, land control, seeds, and opportunities to increase justice
[28]
Thematic Panel - Food Adulteration – The Organisation Of Food Crime
[29]
Thematic Panel: The Dynamics of Food Crime
[30]
"Food Crime: An Introduction to the Sub-discipline of Food Criminology"
Matt Robinson
[31]
Thematic Panel: Eating Humble Pie: Using Prison Food Narratives to Understand Incarceration

Plus two others on other panels
[32]
“to what extent, if any, does the small scale-craft beer industry benefit the environment?” Additionally, this study could shed light on “good green” practices that could reduce environmental damage in other industries (i.e. food processing, textiles etc.).
[33]
Not counted, but food securit/insecurity, food deserts/access to quality,  and related topics are increasingly popular.
[34]
"analyze what we know about CAFOs nationally and in Michigan using four theoretical frameworks that could advance research on the social and environmental issues associated with these farms: criminology, green criminology, environmental justice and conservation criminology"
[35]
Darkness on the Edge of Town: Prisons, CAFOs, and Rural Landscapes of State Power
[36]
"Not only are Ag-Gag laws presumptively unconstitutional, but with their enactment – animal welfare remains unchanged, the American consumer remains uninformed, and America’s factory farms are free to abuse animals behind a legal veil of secrecy."
[37]
Second mention of Ag-Gag, this time in reference to whistleblowers (last one, in 2014, categorized under factory farms).
[38]
protecting race horses
[39]
hematic Panel: Criminology of Food and Agriculture PART I (Farm Victimisation)
[40]
Thematic Panel: Criminology of Food and Agricultural Part II (Farmers as Offenders)
[41]
This paper considers the concept of biopiracy in two ways: first, in terms of the take-over or theft of land and the imposition of enforced changes to farming methods and practices; and, second, in terms of the theft of traditional knowledge and products.
[42]
"Despite massive documented harms to nonhuman animals, small farmers, consumers, and ecological environments, agribusinesses present themselves as good corporate citizens. They do so in part by telling origin stories that recount humble beginnings. By drawing on neoliberal discourses and metaphors of organic growth, these stories naturalize and thus legitimize harmful actions."
[43]
Repeat from 2014?
[44]
Thematic Panel: Visual Approaches in Green Criminology

Plus: Food Bullying at the Intersection of Environmental Crime and Health Discourses of Food Advice

nd: Constructing the “Dangerous Dog”: Nonhumans, Criminality, and Hierarchies of Violence