ABSTRACT

How do young women negotiate their identity in the shadow of a criminal past? What expectations can these women have and what constraints do they face in embracing change and reform?

In this new book, Gilly Sharpe returns to the group of women interviewed in her bestselling book Offending Girls, to ask these questions and more. Building on wide-ranging interviews with young adult women who have experienced a highly punitive climate in both youth justice and welfare policy, this book analyses their vivid personal accounts of stigmatisation and devaluation as former lawbreakers, welfare claimants and mothers, and examines their gendered transitions from youth criminalisation into adulthood. Women, Stigma, and Desistance from Crime exposes how stigma, which is rooted in structural inequality and thrives in societies with deep economic and social divisions, devalues working-class and marginalised women and diminishes their lives. It offers a unique analysis of how criminal stigma is shaped by class-based condescension, welfare inaction and school-based disciplinary punishment, and reveals how stigma is reproduced over time across education, welfare, and penal institutions.

Meticulously researched and the first study to examine how the lives of young women previously enmeshed in the youth justice system unfold as they transition to adulthood, this book will be of interest to scholars and students of criminology and criminal justice, sociology, social work, social policy, gender and youth studies, and to practitioners and policy-makers in these fields.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|17 pages

Youth, inequality and stigma

chapter Chapter 2|24 pages

Precarious transitions

Excluded and criminalised in an era of austerity

chapter Chapter 3|22 pages

Stigmatisation and devaluation beyond the penal sphere

chapter Chapter 4|26 pages

Maternal identities, stigma and desistance from crime

chapter Chapter 5|29 pages

The legacy of education and welfare intervention

chapter Chapter 6|30 pages

Making sense of penal intervention

chapter Chapter 7|18 pages

Conclusion

chapter |20 pages

Methodological a‌ppendix