ABSTRACT

This collection re-imagines the field of criminology with insights gleaned from feminist theory. Works included here illustrate that gender is a key organizing principle of social life. This means that men and women have gender, that patriarchy as well as gender must be theorized, and that other systems of oppression such as race and class must also be studied to fully understand the crime problem and the criminal justice system. Finally, the articles collected here exemplify the feminist concern for thinking consciously about how and why we do our research with the crucial goal of producing knowledge that will promote social justice.

part I|66 pages

Feminist Epistemology

chapter [1]|17 pages

Researching Girls and Violence

Facing the Dilemmas of Fieldwork

chapter [2]|20 pages

Producing feminist knowledge:

Lessons from women in trouble

part II|59 pages

Patriarchy, Crime and Justice

chapter [6]|13 pages

Theorizing About Violence

Observations From the Economic and Social Research Council’s Violence Research Program

part IV|91 pages

Intersections

chapter [11]|19 pages

An Argument for Black Feminist Criminology

Understanding African American Women’s Experiences With Intimate Partner Abuse Using an Integrated Approach

chapter [13]|30 pages

Walking a Tightrope

The Many Faces of Violence in the Lives of Racialized Immigrant Girls and Young Women

chapter [14]|25 pages

Intersections of Immigration and Domestic Violence

Voices of Battered Immigrant Women

part V|156 pages

Feminist Assessments of the Criminal Justice Enterprise

chapter [17]|20 pages

The Words Change, But the Melody Lingers

The Persistence of the Battered Woman Syndrome in Criminal Cases Involving Battered Women

chapter [18]|24 pages

Moral agent or actuarial subject:

Risk and Canadian women’s imprisonment