The Criminalization of Violence Against Women: Comparative Perspectives: Interpersonal Violence
Editat de Heather Douglas, Kate Fitz-Gibbon, Leigh Goodmark, Sandra Walklateen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 noi 2023
Din seria Interpersonal Violence
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197651841
ISBN-10: 0197651844
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 226 x 160 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Interpersonal Violence
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197651844
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 226 x 160 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Interpersonal Violence
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This ground-breaking anthology challenges the widely held belief that all those involved in the feminist movement to end violence against women seek punitive criminal justice responses to the plight of abused women. The readings show that while some feminists still seek increased enforcement of existing laws and harsher penalties for violent men, this is only part of the picture. Many feminists are now at the forefront of progressive efforts to create holistic, non-criminal justice responses and they warrant careful consideration because they effectively address the needs of marginalized survivors that are not met by criminalization.
At a time when the world is rightly concerned with gender-based violence and the violence of racism, policing, and imprisonment, The Criminalization of Violence Against Women: Comparative Perspectives is essential reading. The book brings together ideologically, geographically, and demographically diverse experts who provide deep analyses of the promises and perils of criminalization and imagine new ways of achieving gender and social justice.
This book is a preeminent example of the unique value of edited collections in developing scholarly knowledge. It is a timely and important contribution to our understanding of the place of criminalization in addressing violence against women. The chapters, brought together masterfully by the editors, are rich, thoughtful, and engaging. With a global range of contributors, including leading and emerging scholars, the book offers a genuine diversity of approaches and analyses (or methods and arguments). The collection brings vital new perspectives and crucial nuance to debates about the role of the criminal law in state responses to domestic and family violence. It is a must-read for all those working on combatting violence against women.
This book is essential to the debate about criminal responses to gender-based violence. It brings perspectives from different countries, from the global north and south, allowing us to examine the nuances and different responses to a complex phenomenon that has no simple solutions. This collection invites us to reflect deeply on the theme and is fundamental reading to advance the development of more effective proposals than the traditional approach from the criminal justice system.
This remarkable collection from leading researchers in the field is a much-needed contribution to current feminist debates about the role that the criminal legal system should play in responding to violence against women. The authors bring a range of perspectives - each one well-researched, nuanced, and illuminating. With writing that spans differences across geography, disciplines, and methodologies, the book is a must-read for scholars, students, and for all those who grapple with how to respond to the global problems of violence against women in the context of state systems that are frequently themselves sites of colonial and racial violence.
In The Criminalization of Violence Against Women: Comparative Perspectives, the contributors have produced a rich, challenging, and extremely timely intervention that wrestles with questions about the parameters, legitimacy, and value of criminalization as a response to gender-based violence. Confronting the risks, costs, and benefits of criminalization, the book does not shy from the scale of the challenge or complexity of the issues at stake, and reaches beyond to interrogate the potential for alternative framings to provide more holistic, sustainable, and transformative solutions.
This essay collection reports on how the law in different societies deals with women. Recommended.
At a time when the world is rightly concerned with gender-based violence and the violence of racism, policing, and imprisonment, The Criminalization of Violence Against Women: Comparative Perspectives is essential reading. The book brings together ideologically, geographically, and demographically diverse experts who provide deep analyses of the promises and perils of criminalization and imagine new ways of achieving gender and social justice.
This book is a preeminent example of the unique value of edited collections in developing scholarly knowledge. It is a timely and important contribution to our understanding of the place of criminalization in addressing violence against women. The chapters, brought together masterfully by the editors, are rich, thoughtful, and engaging. With a global range of contributors, including leading and emerging scholars, the book offers a genuine diversity of approaches and analyses (or methods and arguments). The collection brings vital new perspectives and crucial nuance to debates about the role of the criminal law in state responses to domestic and family violence. It is a must-read for all those working on combatting violence against women.
This book is essential to the debate about criminal responses to gender-based violence. It brings perspectives from different countries, from the global north and south, allowing us to examine the nuances and different responses to a complex phenomenon that has no simple solutions. This collection invites us to reflect deeply on the theme and is fundamental reading to advance the development of more effective proposals than the traditional approach from the criminal justice system.
This remarkable collection from leading researchers in the field is a much-needed contribution to current feminist debates about the role that the criminal legal system should play in responding to violence against women. The authors bring a range of perspectives - each one well-researched, nuanced, and illuminating. With writing that spans differences across geography, disciplines, and methodologies, the book is a must-read for scholars, students, and for all those who grapple with how to respond to the global problems of violence against women in the context of state systems that are frequently themselves sites of colonial and racial violence.
In The Criminalization of Violence Against Women: Comparative Perspectives, the contributors have produced a rich, challenging, and extremely timely intervention that wrestles with questions about the parameters, legitimacy, and value of criminalization as a response to gender-based violence. Confronting the risks, costs, and benefits of criminalization, the book does not shy from the scale of the challenge or complexity of the issues at stake, and reaches beyond to interrogate the potential for alternative framings to provide more holistic, sustainable, and transformative solutions.
This essay collection reports on how the law in different societies deals with women. Recommended.
Notă biografică
Heather Douglas is Professor, Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, AustraliaKate Fitz-Gibbon is Professor of Social Sciences and Director, Monash Gender and Family Violence Prevention Centre, Faculty of Arts, Monash University, AustraliaLeigh Goodmark is the Marjorie Cook Professor of Law and director of the Gender, Prison, and Trauma Clinic at the Francis King Carey School of Law, University of Maryland, United StatesSandra Walklate is the Eleanor Rathbone Chair of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology, University of Liverpool, England