ラウトレッジ版 女性たちの刑事司法経験ハンドブック<br>The Routledge Handbook of Women's Experiences of Criminal Justice

個数:1
紙書籍版価格
¥58,206
  • 電子書籍

ラウトレッジ版 女性たちの刑事司法経験ハンドブック
The Routledge Handbook of Women's Experiences of Criminal Justice

  • 著者名:Masson, Isla (EDT)/Booth, Natalie (EDT)
  • 価格 ¥10,671 (本体¥9,701)
  • Routledge(2022/10/25発売)
  • ポイント 97pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9781032064307
  • eISBN:9781000604252

ファイル: /

Description

This Handbook brings together the voices of a range of contributors interested in the many varied experiences of women in criminal justice systems, and who are seeking to challenge the status quo.

Although there is increasing literature and research on gender, and certain aspects of the criminal justice system (often Western focused), there is a significant gap in the form of a Handbook that brings together these important gendered conversations. This essential book explores research and theory on how women are perceived, handled, and experience criminal justice within and across different jurisdictions, with particular consideration of gendered and disparate treatment of women as law-breakers. There is also consideration of women’s experiences through an intersectional lens, including race and class, as well as feminist scholarship and activism. The Handbook contains 47 unique chapters with nine overarching themes (Lessons from history and theory; Routes into the criminal justice system; Intersectionality; Sentencing and the courts and community punishments; Specific offences; Incarcerated women’s experiences; Mothers and families; Rehabilitation and reintegration; Practitioner relationships), and each theme includes contributions from different countries as well as the experiences of contributors from different stages in their own journey.

International and interdisciplinary in scope, this Handbook is essential reading for scholars and students of criminology, sociology, social policy, social work, and law. It will also be of interest to practitioners, such as social workers, probation officers, prison officers, and policy makers.

Table of Contents

 

  1. Introduction
  2. Isla Masson and Natalie Booth

  3. Womanhood as Weakness, or Why Witches Were Witches
  4. Trace M Maddox

  5. Infanticide Cases, Expert Evidence, and the Sympathetic Jury, in Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century England
  6. Rachel Dixon

  7. ‘Completely innocent or wholly culpable’: Judicial outcomes of women tried for homicide in pre-modern England
  8. Stephanie Brown

  9. Shifting trends and discourses in women’s imprisonment in Aotearoa New Zealand
  10. Fairleigh Evelyn Gilmour and Kirsten Gibson

  11. Criminalised Women and the Risk Lens
  12. Hazel Kemshall

  13. Women’s desistance: A review of the literature through a gendered lens
  14. Madeline Pertrillo

  15. Perpetrators and Victims: Women, double deviance, and the criminal justice system
  16. Vicky Seaman and Orla Lynch

  17. "She Should Have Known": Oversimplified narratives of the victim-offender cycle within women human trafficking ‘offenders’
  18. Alexandra L. A. Baxter

  19. Care-Experienced Women in the Criminal Justice System
  20. Claire Fitzpatrick, Jo Staines and Katie Hunter

  21. Family violence, homelessness and criminalised women: accounting for systemic violence in the Australian post-release milieu
  22. Rebecca Bunn and Elisa Buggy

  23. Domestic abuse as a driver to women’s offending
  24. Jo Roberts

  25. Muslim Women Moving on from Crime
  26. Sofia Buncy, Alexandria Bradley and Sarah Goodwin

  27. Making visible the invisibalised voices of criminalised women in Australia
  28. Debbie Kilroy and Tabitha Lean

  29. Women, Religion and Criminal Justice in Ireland
  30. Lynsey Black

  31. Women’s Experiences of Criminal Justice System in Pursuit of Inheritance: Voices from Pakistan
  32. Iram Rubab

  33. Lived Realities of Spouses of Incarcerated Husbands in India
  34. Rashmi Choudhury

  35. Lesbian Experiences of the Criminal Justice System: A Practitioner Perspective
  36. Kath Wilson

  37. At the intersection of disadvantage, disillusionment and resilience: Black women's experiences in prison
  38. Angela Charles

  39. Remanding Women: Exploring the scope for using therapeutic jurisprudence as a framework in the bail and remand decision-making process
  40. Lisa Mary Armstrong

  41. Being a girl: does it matter in the Belgian Youth Court?
  42. Sofie De Bus

  43. Young Women in Norwegian Courts: A Study of Contemporary Control Strategies
  44. Jane Dullum, Elisabeth Fransson and Sven-Erik Skotte

  45. Assessing the viability of problem-solving courts for criminalised women
  46. Carly Lightowlers and Nicole Benefer

  47. The Gendered Harms of Criminalisation: Buying abortion pills on the internet in Northern Ireland
  48. Goretti Horgan and Linda Moore

  49. The meaning of gender in sentencing domestic violence homicide cases in Poland
  50. Anna Matczak and Emilia Rekosz-Cebula

  51. Being female sex offenders inside the criminal justice system: The Colombian case
  52. Angie Borda-Montenegro

  53. Situating police legitimacy: The accounts of substance-using and sex-working women in Nigeria
  54. Ediomo-Ubong E. Nelson and Aniekan S. Brown

  55. Out of sight, out of mind: The incarceration of cognitively disabled women in Australian prisons
  56. Julie-Anne Toohey

  57. Incarcerated Women’s Experiences in Spain
  58. Carmen Navarro, Anna Meléndez and Jenny Cubells

  59. Peer mentoring for women in prison: experiences of power, control and reliving past trauma
  60. Melissa Henderson and Rosie Meek

  61. Carceral collectivism and incarcerated women’s experiences in Lithuania and Latvia
  62. Rūta Vaičiūnienė, Arta Jalili Idrissi and Artūras Tereškinas

  63. Maternal Imprisonment: The enduring impact of imprisonment on mothers and their children
  64. Lucy Baldwin and Sophie Mitchell

  65. Imprisoned Women and Reproductive Health: A Site of Reproductive Rights Violation?
  66. Emma Milne and Vicki Dabrowski

  67. Mother-infant separations in prison: Why does context matter?
  68. Klare Martin and Claire Powell

  69. Mothering within a Prison Nursery – a review of the literature
  70. Jacqui Johnson

  71. (Wo)men in the middle: the gendered role of supporting prisoners
  72. Natalie Booth and Isla Masson with Ferzana Dakri

  73. A holistic approach to understanding and responding to the multiple and complex needs of women prison leavers in Wales: breaking the cycle of homelessness and reoffending
  74. Caroline Gorden and Kelly Lockwood

  75. "It is nice to know that for once someone is not just saying that they’re backing your corner, they are actually fucking backing your corner": The significance of relational factors in women’s experiences of probation intervention
  76. Natalie Rutter and Julie Eden-Barnard

  77. Women, the pains of imprisonment and public health interventions
  78. Jennifer Ferguson and Maggie Leese

  79. A Darker Tale of Exceptionalism: How Punitive Drug Policies Impact Women’s Experiences of Desistance in Sweden
  80. Robin Gålnander and Linnéa Österman

  81. Accounting for the gendered nature of ‘collateral consequences’ of a criminal record
  82. Nicola A. Collett

  83. A New Emancipatory Script: gendered post-sentence discrimination and experiences of reintegration
  84. Caroline Bald, Rachel Tynan and Olivia Dehnavi

  85. Experiencing the Juvenile Legal System as a Girl: Lessons from Gender-Responsive Approaches and Trauma-Informed Care
  86. Nicole C McKenna, Valerie R Anderson, Eurielle Kiki, and Destinee L Starcher

  87. Imprisoned Women’s Experiences of Trust in Staff-Prisoner Relationships in an English Open Prison
  88. Sarah Waite

  89. Supervising women in the community: A view from Catalonia
  90. Cristina Vasilescu

  91. ‘I don’t know where to fit...how to fit back in...as a mum...as a person’: Exploring the implications for practitioners of women’s experiences of resettlement following short-term custody
  92. Laura Haggar

  93. "She has nothing really when she goes out of prison": Community-based practitioners’ perceptions of young women’s pathways through the criminal justice system in Scotland

Annie Rose Crowley

 

最近チェックした商品