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Coercion and Women Co-offenders

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What role does coercion play in women’s involvement in crime? This is the first book to explore coercion as a pathway into crime for co-offending women. Using newspaper articles and case and court ...
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  • 01 October 2016
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What role does coercion play in women’s involvement in crime?

This is the first book to explore coercion as a pathway into crime for co-offending women. Using newspaper articles and case and court files, it analyses four cases of women co-accused of a crime with their partner who suggested that coercive techniques had influenced their involvement in the offending.

Based on a feminist perspective, it highlights the importance of gender role expectations and gendered discourses in how the trials were conducted, and the ways in which the media framed the trials (and the women).

Considering the legal and social construction of coercion, this fascinating book concludes by exploring the implications for public understanding of coercion and female offending more broadly.

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Price: $37.95
Pages: 112
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 01 October 2016
ISBN: 9781447330981
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Offenders / Criminals, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, Gender studies: women and girls
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Dr Charlotte Barlow is a Lecturer in Criminology at Lancaster University and has previously worked at Birmingham City University. Charlotte graduated with First Class Honours from Keele University and completed her PhD at the University of Liverpool, graduating in 2015. Charlotte's broad research interests include female offending, media representations of crime and deviancy and violence against women and girls.

Mediated representations and understandings of co-offending women;

Theoretical understandings of coercion as a pathway into crime;

Understanding the social construction of coerced women;

A feminist critique of representations of potentially coerced women;

Applying the ‘continuum of coercion’: an alternative, feminist framework;

Coerced women and criminology: looking to the future.