Produktbild: Morash, M: Feminist Theories of Crime

Morash, M: Feminist Theories of Crime

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

28.10.2011

Verlag

Taylor and Francis

Seitenzahl

592

Maße (L/B)

24.6/17.4 cm

Gewicht

1356 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-7546-2971-9

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

28.10.2011

Verlag

Taylor and Francis

Seitenzahl

592

Maße (L/B)

24.6/17.4 cm

Gewicht

1356 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-7546-2971-9

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  • Produktbild: Morash, M: Feminist Theories of Crime
  • Part I Feminist Epistemology: Researching girls and violence - facing the dilemmas of fieldwork, Michele J. Burman, Susan A. Batchelor and Jane A. Brown; Producing feminist knowledge: lessons for women in trouble, Elizabeth Comack; Women's violence to men in intimate relationships: working on a puzzle, Russell P. Dobash and R. Emerson Dobash.; Part II Patriarchy, Crime, and Justice: Women in the street-level drug economy: continuity or change, Lisa Maher and Kathleen Daly; The risks of street prostitution: punters, police and protesters, Teela Sanders; Theorizing about violence: observations from the Economic and Social Research Council's violence research program, Elizabeth A. Stanko.; Part III Masculinities and Femininities: Accomplishing femininity among the girls in the gang, Karen Joe Laidler and Geoffrey Hunt; Girls violence: beyond dangerous masculinity, Katherine Irwin and Meda Chesney-Lind; Missing gender in cases of infamous school violence, Mona J.E. Danner and Diane C. Carmody; Immigration, masculinity, and intimate partner violence from the standpoint of domestic violence service providers and Vietnamese-origin women, Hoan Bui and Merry Morash.; Part IV Intersections: An argument for Black feminist criminology: understanding African American women's experience with intimate partner abuse using an integrated approach, Hillary Potter; It's not where you live, it's how you live: how young women negotiate conflict and violence in the inner city, Nikki Jones; Walking a tight-rope: the many faces of violence in the lives of racialized immigrant girls and young women, Yasmin Jiwani; Intersections of immigration and domestic violence: Voices of battered immigrant women, Edna Erez, Madelaine Adelman and Carol Gregory.; Part V Feminist Assessments of the Criminal Justice Enterprise: Gender bias and juvenile justice revisited: A multi-year analysis, John M. MacDonald and Meda Chesney-Lind; Criers, liars and manipulators: probation officers' views of girls, Emily Gaarder, Nancy Rodriguez and Marjorie Zatz; The words change but the melody lingers: the persistence of battered woman syndrome in criminal cases involving battered women, Kathleen J. Ferraro; Moral agent or actuarial subject: risk and Canadian women's imprisonment, K. Hannah-Moffat; Embodied surveillance and the gendering of punishment, Jill A. McCorkel; Celling Black bodies: Black women in the global prison industrial complex, Julia Sudbury.; Part VI Feminist Perspectives on the Law and on Justice: Predators: the social construction of 'stranger-danger' in Washington state as a form of patriarchal ideology, Neal Websdale; Feminist engagement with restorative justice, Kathleen Daly and Julie Stubbs; Gendered war and gendered peace: truth commissions and post-conflict gender violence: lessons from South Africa, Tristan A. Borer; Name index.