You are here

PLEASE NOTE: Sage UK Distribution including UK Books Customer Services will be closed for a stocktake from 27th November to 29th November. This affects only book orders and queries from the UK. Any orders placed during this period; or queries emailed, will be dealt with as normal when service resumes on 2nd December. Thank you for your patience and we apologise for any inconvenience caused.

Disable VAT on Taiwan

Unfortunately, as of 1 January 2020 SAGE Ltd is no longer able to support sales of electronically supplied services to Taiwan customers that are not Taiwan VAT registered. We apologise for any inconvenience. For more information or to place a print-only order, please contact uk.customerservices@sagepub.co.uk.

Girls, Women, and Crime
Share
Share

Girls, Women, and Crime
Selected Readings

Second Edition
Edited by:


March 2012 | 280 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Edited by Meda Chesney-Lind and Lisa Pasko, Girls, Women and Crime: Selected Readings, Second Edition is a compilation of journal articles on the female offender written by leading researchers in the field of criminology and women's studies. The individual sections in the book survey four major areas: theories of female criminality, literature on female juvenile delinquents, women as offenders and women in prison. The readings in Girls, Women, and Crime focus on two central questions: How does gender matter in crime and the justice system? What characterizes women's and girls' pathway to crime? In answering these key questions, the contributors reveal the complex worlds females in the criminal justice system must often negotiate-worlds that are frequently riddled with violence, victimization, discrimination, and economic marginalization.
 
Introduction
 
PART I. GENDER AND CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORIZING: GENDER AT THE FOREFRONT
Kathleen Daly
Chapter 1. Different Ways of Conceptualizing Sex/Gender in Feminist Theory and Their Implications for Criminology
Lyn Mikel Brown, Meda Chesney-Lind, and Nan Stein
Chapter 2. Patriarchy Matters: Toward a Gendered Theory of Teen Violence and Victimization
Dana M. Britton
Chapter 3. Feminism in Criminology: Engendering the Outlaw
Hillary Potter
Chapter 4. An Argument for Black Feminist Criminology: Understanding African American Women's Experiences With Intimate Partner Abuse Using an Integrated Approach
 
PART II. FEMALE JUVENILE DELINQUENTS: VICTIMIZATION, DELINQUENCY, AND THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM
Carla P. Davis
Chapter 5. At-Risk Girls and Delinquency: Career Pathways
Laurie Schaffner
Chapter 6. Violence Against Girls Provokes Girls' Violence: From Private Injury to Public Harm
Joanne Belknap and Kristi Holsinger
Chapter 7. The Gendered Nature of Risk Factors for Delinquency
Barbara Bloom, Barbara Owen, Elizabeth Piper Deschenes, and Jill Rosenbaum
Chapter 8. Moving Toward Justice for Female Juvenile Offenders in the New Millennium: Modeling Gender-Specific Policies and Programs
 
PART III. THE WOMAN OFFENDER: WOMEN'S EXPERIENCES WITH DRUGS, CRIME, AND VIOLENCE
Elicka S. L. Peterson
Chapter 9. Murder as Self-Help: Women and Intimate Partner Homicide
Priscilla Pyett and Deborah Warr
Chapter 10. Women at Risk in Sex Work: Strategies for Survival
Tammy L. Anderson
Chapter 11. Dimensions of Women's Power in the Illicit Drug Economy
Stephanie R. Bush-Baskette
Chapter 12. The War on Drugs as a War Against Black Women
 
PART IV. THE FEMALE OFFENDER AND INCARCERATION: BEFORE, DURING, AND AFTER INCARCERATION
Meda Chesney-Lind and Noelie Rodriguez
Chapter 13. Women Under Lock and Key: A View From the Inside
Kimberly R. Greer
Chapter 14. The Changing Nature of Interpersonal Relationships in a Women's Prison
Lisa Pasko
Chapter 15. "Setting the Record Straight": Girls, Sexuality, and the Juvenile Correctional System
Andrea Leverentz
Chapter 16. People, Places, and Things: How Female Ex-Prisoners Negotiate Their Neighborhood Context
 
Index
 
About the Editors

It was considered an excellent choice for our course. The course is LSCJ 5353, Women and Crime.

You have our course listed as "Mediation: History, Theory, Practice" . This is another course.

Mrs Janet Miller
College of Liberal Studies, University Of Oklahoma
October 17, 2014

Would be a good supplement to a traditional text; I did not adopt because I chose a text that included research pieces, so I did not need an additional external source of research articles.

Dr Mary Zager
Professional Studies Dept, Florida Gulf Coast University
October 12, 2012

Sample Materials & Chapters

toc

ch 1

ch 3


For instructors

Select a Purchasing Option

SAGE Knowledge is the premier social sciences platform for SAGE and CQ Press book, reference and video content.

The platform allows researchers to cross-search and seamlessly access a wide breadth of must-have SAGE book and reference content from one source.