ABSTRACT

Women, Crime and Justice in Context presents contemporary feminist approaches to key issues in criminal justice. It draws together key researchers from Australia and New Zealand to offer a context-specific textbook that covers all of the major debates in the discipline in an accessible way.

This book examines both the foundational texts and cutting-edge contributions to the topic and acknowledges the unique challenges and debates in the local Australian and New Zealand context. Written as an entry-level text, it introduces undergraduate students to key theories and debates on the topics of offending, victimization and the criminal justice system. It explores key topics in feminist criminology with chapters exploring sex work, prison abolitionism, community punishment, media representations of crime and victims, and the impacts of digital technology on gendered violence. Centring on an intersectional approach, the book includes chapters that focus on disability, queer criminology, indigenous perspectives, migration and service-user perspectives. The book concludes by exploring future directions in feminist approaches to crime and justice.

This book will be essential reading for undergraduates studying feminist criminology, gender and crime, queer criminology, socio-legal studies, intersectionality, sociology and criminal justice.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|14 pages

Feminist criminology

chapter 3|17 pages

Gender and victimology

A necessary pairing

chapter 4|13 pages

Gender, criminal law and violence against women

Mapping the limits of legal interventions and approaches to reform

chapter 6|14 pages

Sex work, feminism and the legal system

Aotearoa in a global context

chapter 8|17 pages

Violence against women in true crime podcasts

Beyond representation and on to justice in the late-modern landscape

chapter 10|16 pages

Punishment in the community

Community sentences and gender

chapter 11|15 pages

Post-prison experiences and women

chapter 13|14 pages

Queer criminology

chapter 15|14 pages

“Nothing about us, without us”

Centring the voices of criminalised women

chapter 16|15 pages

Women and crimmigration

chapter 17|14 pages

Feminist prison abolitionism

chapter 18|7 pages

Conclusions