Edited by Claire M. Renzetti, Lynne Goodstein and Susan L. Miller
Esteemed criminologists Claire M. Renzetti, Lynne Goodstein, and Susan L. Miller's volume of original essays covers a broad range of topics of interest to those who study women, crime, and criminal justice. Contributors include leading scholars of crime and justice such as Ronet Bachman, Joanne
Belknap, Jeanne Flavin, James Messerschmidt, Jody Miller, and Merry Morash.
This collection is designed to deepen students' understanding about the essential role that gender plays in the commission of--and societal responses to--criminal behavior. Rethinking Gender, Crime, and Justice
demonstrates how our notions of gender, race, and class influence both how society defines crime as well as how offenders commit crimes and are "treated" for their actions.
The book includes a rich variety of national and global perspectives. It reviews the most up-to-date knowledge on
gender and crime, women as offenders and victims, and the impact of gender on policing, corrections administration, and the courts. The essays in this collection are engagingly and accessibly written. They challenge students to question their assumptions about criminality, victimization, and how
such situations are--and should be--approached.
Rethinking Gender, Crime, and Justice covers issues that are frequently left out of traditional criminology texts. Coverage includes:
* What distinguishes feminist criminology from mainstream criminology.
* Why an
understanding of gender is critical to understanding criminal offending, victimization, and criminal justice responses.
* How female victimization can lead to criminality.
* Whether girls' violence is becoming more like boys'.
* How women and girls are globally enslaved through
the sex industry.
* How women prisoners are treated inequitably.
* What happens to the families of women in prison.
* What challenges women police officers, correctional officers, attorneys, and judges have faced and how they are overcoming them.
* Discussion questions follow
every essay, encouraging students to think critically about each reading and go beyond it to learn more about the topics addressed.
1. Introduction: Rethinking Gender, Crime, and Justice
Lynne Goodstein
2. Feminism and Crime
Jeanne Flavin and Amy Desautels
3. Masculinities and Crime: Beyond a Dualist Criminology
James W. Messerschmidt
4. Liberating
Criminology: The Evolution of Feminist Thinking on Criminological Research Methods
Ronet Bachman and Christina Lanier
5. Age-Graded Pathways to Victimization and Offending among Women and Girls
Catherine Kaukinen, Angela R. Gover, and Stephanie A. Hays
6.
Juvenile Delinquency and Gender: Young Women, Criminal Behavior, and Gang Involvement
Patrick J. Carr and Gabrielle Alfieri
7. Gender and Violent Crime
Claire M. Renzetti
8. Female Drug Offenders and the Drug/Crime Subculture: Gender, Stigma, and Social
Control
Susan E. Martin
9. Compensating for Abuse: Women's Involvement in the Sex Trade in North America
Jody Raphael
10. Global Prostitution, Sex Tourism, and Trafficking
Jody Miller
11. Sexual Assault Reforms: Thirty Years and
Counting
Susan Caringella
12. Intimate Partner Abuse
Joanne Belknap and Hillary Potter
13. Women, Race/Ethnicity, and Criminal Justice Processing
Vernetta D. Young and Terri Adams-Fuller
14. Issues Facing Women Prisoners in the Early
Twenty-First Century
Tammy L. Anderson
15. Workplace Problems in Police Departments and Methods of Coping: Women at the Intersection
Merry Morash, Robin Haarr, and Dian P. Gonyea
16. Women Criminal Lawyers
Cynthia Siemsen
17. Women on
the Bench: The Voices and Experiences of Female Judges
Michelle L. Meloy, Shana Maier, and Susan L. Miller
18. 'Yes, I've Paid the Price, but Look How Much I Gained': The Struggle and Status of Women Correctional Officers
Mary K. Stohr
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.
Claire M. Renzetti is at St. Joseph's University. Lynne Goodstein is at the University of Connecticut. Susan L. Miller is at the University of Delaware.
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