This article discusses the work of Dr Mary Louisa Gordon, who was appointed as the first English Lady Inspector of Prisons in 1908, and remained in post until 1921. Her attitude towards and treatment of women prisoners, as explained in her 1922 book Penal Discipline, stands in sharp contrast to that of her male contemporaries, and the categorisation of her approach as 'feminist' is reinforced by her documented connections with the suffragette movement. Yet her feminist and suffragist associations also resulted in the marginalisation and dismissal of her work, such that Mary Gordon and Penal Discipline are virtually unknown today. Nevertheless, her insights into the position and needs of women prisoners retain a striking contemporary relevan...
Upon committal to one of the newly established female convict prisons in the mid-nineteenth century,...
This article examines the release and aftercare of female prisoners in England during the late ninet...
Two studies considered the possible impact of the feminist movement upon criminal justice decisions ...
This article examines the working lives of female prison officers between 1877 and 1939. It document...
Mary Carpenter, a Victorian prison reformer, asserted that women prisoners were a threat to society,...
Feminism and Criminal Justice is a wide-ranging study of the involvement of the women's movement in ...
Mary Carpenter (1807-77) was one of mid-Victorian England's most prolific social reformers, starting...
This article focuses on the role played by sisterhood penitentiaries in the rehabilitation of 'falle...
This article examines the impact of England's first women justices of the peace (JPs) on the work of...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis offers a genealogy of some current forms of pena...
Investigations of women's offending have, in historical as well as criminological literature, bypass...
This article examines the release and aftercare of female prisoners in England during the late ninet...
This article contains images of women's prison cells and poetry written by women in and after priso...
Upon committal to one of the newly established female convict prisons in the mid-nineteenth century,...
Despite changes to strip searching policy as spearheaded by the Corston Report (2007), there is limi...
Upon committal to one of the newly established female convict prisons in the mid-nineteenth century,...
This article examines the release and aftercare of female prisoners in England during the late ninet...
Two studies considered the possible impact of the feminist movement upon criminal justice decisions ...
This article examines the working lives of female prison officers between 1877 and 1939. It document...
Mary Carpenter, a Victorian prison reformer, asserted that women prisoners were a threat to society,...
Feminism and Criminal Justice is a wide-ranging study of the involvement of the women's movement in ...
Mary Carpenter (1807-77) was one of mid-Victorian England's most prolific social reformers, starting...
This article focuses on the role played by sisterhood penitentiaries in the rehabilitation of 'falle...
This article examines the impact of England's first women justices of the peace (JPs) on the work of...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis offers a genealogy of some current forms of pena...
Investigations of women's offending have, in historical as well as criminological literature, bypass...
This article examines the release and aftercare of female prisoners in England during the late ninet...
This article contains images of women's prison cells and poetry written by women in and after priso...
Upon committal to one of the newly established female convict prisons in the mid-nineteenth century,...
Despite changes to strip searching policy as spearheaded by the Corston Report (2007), there is limi...
Upon committal to one of the newly established female convict prisons in the mid-nineteenth century,...
This article examines the release and aftercare of female prisoners in England during the late ninet...
Two studies considered the possible impact of the feminist movement upon criminal justice decisions ...