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Download Gender, Crime and Criminal Justice djvu

by Sandra Walklate

Author: Sandra Walklate
Subcategory: Social Sciences
Language: English
Publisher: Willan Pub; First Edition edition (May 1, 2001)
Pages: 201 pages
Category: Politics
Rating: 4.5
Other formats: lrf mobi doc lrf

This book explains why offending, victimization, policing, prisons, and the crime polices are inherently gendered. Walklate and Fitz-Gibbon weave their way through a complex map of gendered criminal justice practices, theories and policies.

This book explains why offending, victimization, policing, prisons, and the crime polices are inherently gendered. The book should be essential reading for a wide range of students, scholars, policy makers and criminal justice practitioners interested in crime, gender and criminal justice. Kerry Carrington, Professor and Head of School of Justice, Faculty of Law, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.

It deals with a wide range of issues within criminology and victimology from the way in which the fear of crime is debated to the way in which the law operates in a gendered fashion.

Sandra Walklate is Professor of Criminology, Manchester Metropolitan University. Paperback: 248 pages. ISBN-10: 9781843920687.

sustain or change those experiences of crime and criminal victimization in relation to gender.

The book is divided into three main sections. sustain or change those experiences of crime and criminal victimization in relation to gender.

item 1 Gender and Crime: An Introduction by Walklate, Sandra Paperback Book The Cheap -Gender and Crime: An Introduction .

item 1 Gender and Crime: An Introduction by Walklate, Sandra Paperback Book The Cheap -Gender and Crime: An Introduction by Walklate, Sandra Paperback Book The Cheap. item 2 Gender and Crime by Walkloto, Sandra -Gender and Crime by Walkloto, Sandra. item 3 Gender and Crime: An Introduction by Walklate, Sandra -Gender and Crime: An Introduction by Walklate, Sandra. This introduction to gender issues in crime and criminal justice is wide ranging, looking at both offenders and victims, the workings of the criminal justice and penal systems and the social context for crime.

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Gender, crime, and criminal justice. 1 2 3 4 5. Want to Read. Are you sure you want to remove Gender, crime, and criminal justice from your list? Gender, crime, and criminal justice. 2nd ed. by Sandra Walklate. Published 2004 by Willan Pub. in Cullompton, Devon, UK, Portland, Or. Written in English.

This book examines the relationship between gender and crime and explores both the gendered nature of crime . by Kate Fitz-Gibbon, Sandra Walklate. Gendered perspectives in law and criminal justice policy

This book examines the relationship between gender and crime and explores both the gendered nature of crime alongside t. . Gendered perspectives in law and criminal justice policy. This is essential reading for advanced courses on gender and crime, women and crime, and feminist criminology.

Gender, crime and criminal justice. Reframing criminal victimization: Finding a place for vulnerability and resilience. Imagining the victim of crime. McGraw-Hill Education (UK), 2006. Victimology (Routledge Revivals): The Victim and the Criminal Justice Process. Theoretical Criminology 15 (2), 179-194, 2011.

This book provides a lucid and highly accessible introduction to gender issues in crime and criminal justice, central to any understanding of crime and criminal justice policy. It deals with a wide range of issues within criminology and victimology from the way in which the fear of crime is debated to the way in which the law operates in a gendered fashion. It replaces and updates her earlier book "Gender and Crime: An Introduction" (1995). "Gender, Crime and Criminal Justice" is divided into three main sections, addressing theoretical issues (especially masculinity and feminism); substantive issues (looking particularly at the relationship between risk, criminality and masculinity, and sexual violence); and questions of policy, examining gender in the criminal justice professions, and in government criminal justice policy. The book concludes with an overview of the themes raised in the book, special attention being paid to recent work on the unhappy juxtaposition of sex, race and class.