Listing 1 - 5 of 5 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Feminist criticism --- Media --- Images of women --- Book --- Criminality --- Perpetrators
Choose an application
This is the first book to explore coercion as a pathway into crime for co-offending women. It analyses four cases of women co-accused of a crime with their partner who suggested that coercive techniques had influenced their involvement, and concludes by exploring the implications for public understanding of coercion and female offending.
Undue influence. --- Female offenders. --- Duress (Law) --- Undue influence --- Female offenders --- Great Britain. --- Coercion (Law) --- Compulsion --- Criminal liability --- Law --- Necessity (Law) --- Threats --- Torts --- Influence, Undue --- Contracts --- Declaration of intention --- Immoral contracts --- Lesion (Law) --- Wills --- Delinquent women --- Offenders, Female --- Women --- Women criminals --- Women offenders --- Criminals --- Law and legislation --- Crime
Choose an application
Written by leading experts in the field, this timely collection highlights current strategies and thinking in relation to prevention of sexual violence and critically considers the limitations of these frameworks. Combining psychological, criminological, sociological and legal perspectives, it explores academic, practitioner and survivor points of view. It addresses broad themes, from cultures of sexual harassment to the role of media in oversexualising women and girls, as well as specific issues including violence against children and older people. For researchers, practitioners and students alike, this is an invaluable resource that maps new approaches for practice and prevention.
Sex crimes --- Prevention. --- Prevention --- Sex crimes ; Prevention.
Choose an application
This book offers a critical appreciation of the nature and impact of coercive control in interpersonal relationships. It examines what this concept means, who is impacted by the behaviours it captures, and how academics, policy-makers and policy advocates have responded to the increasing recognition of the deleterious effects that coercive control has on especially women⁰́₉s lives. The books discussed the historical emergence of this concept, who its main proponents have been, and how its effects have been understood. It considers the role of coercive control in making sense of women⁰́₉s pathway into crime as well as their experiences of it as victims. Coercive control has been presented predominantly as a gendered process and consideration is given in this book to the efficacy of this assumption as well as the extent to which the concept makes sense for a wide constituency of marginalised women. In recent years, much energy has been given to efforts to criminalise coercive control and the concerns that these efforts generate are discussed in detail, alongside what the limitations to such initiatives might be. In conclusion the book situates the rising pre-occupation with coercive control within the broader concerns with policy transfer, ways of taking account of victim-survivor voices, alongside the importance of working towards more holistic policy responses to violence(s) against women. The book will be of particular interest to academics, policy-makers and practitioners working in criminal justice who wish to both understand the nature and extent of coercive control, as well the importance of appreciating the role of nuance in translating that understanding into practice.
Criminal anthropology. --- Criminal behavior. --- Control (Psychology) --- Female offenders --- Psychology.
Choose an application
Listing 1 - 5 of 5 |
Sort by
|