This article considers the trial and execution of Elizabeth Woolcock in 1873 for the alleged murder of her husband by poison. In examining the evidence adduced against her, notably the inconclusive scientific evidence, it is argued that Elizabeth was not the callous murderer presented by the prosecution but an 'innocent victim of circumstance' who was convicted and condemned to death, as much upon speculation and stereotype, as upon the tenuous strength of the prosecution case. Both Elizabeth's trial and her eventual fate can be viewed in a wider context and illustrate the often polarized perception and treatment of female capital offenders during this period. Elizabeth's already heinous crime in murdering her husband, further aggravated th...
In 1895 Minnie Dean became the only New Zealand woman to receive the death penalty. In the Invercarg...
This article is a case study of the way the decision to commute a death sentence was reached. The Bi...
"The law should take its course". With this pronouncement, Lieutenant-General Sir William Jervois, G...
This article examines crimes committed by women involving the use of poison, notably upon their husb...
This article examines crimes committed by women involving the use of poison, notably upon their husb...
This article examines crimes committed by women involving the use of poison, notably upon their husb...
Scholarship on women and homicide has focused increasingly on the ways in which race, class, ethnici...
The exercise of the death penalty and the operation of the prerogative of mercy in 19th century Brit...
In the mid-1890s, the so-called ‘Dean Case’ caused a sensation across Australia. George Dean was a 2...
This article provides an analysis of R v Vollmer and Others, Australia’s most famous ‘exorcism-mansl...
This article examines two notable British trials which took place in the late Victorian period: the ...
In the mid-1890s, the so-called ‘Dean Case’ caused a sensation across Australia. George Dean was a 2...
In January 1889, Louisa Collins became the last woman to be executed in New South Wales. The press f...
In September 1952, 30 year old Yvonne Gladys Fletcher of Newtown, New South Wales, stood trial befor...
Abstract: This article discusses the sensational trial of the serial poisoner Daisy de Melker in ter...
In 1895 Minnie Dean became the only New Zealand woman to receive the death penalty. In the Invercarg...
This article is a case study of the way the decision to commute a death sentence was reached. The Bi...
"The law should take its course". With this pronouncement, Lieutenant-General Sir William Jervois, G...
This article examines crimes committed by women involving the use of poison, notably upon their husb...
This article examines crimes committed by women involving the use of poison, notably upon their husb...
This article examines crimes committed by women involving the use of poison, notably upon their husb...
Scholarship on women and homicide has focused increasingly on the ways in which race, class, ethnici...
The exercise of the death penalty and the operation of the prerogative of mercy in 19th century Brit...
In the mid-1890s, the so-called ‘Dean Case’ caused a sensation across Australia. George Dean was a 2...
This article provides an analysis of R v Vollmer and Others, Australia’s most famous ‘exorcism-mansl...
This article examines two notable British trials which took place in the late Victorian period: the ...
In the mid-1890s, the so-called ‘Dean Case’ caused a sensation across Australia. George Dean was a 2...
In January 1889, Louisa Collins became the last woman to be executed in New South Wales. The press f...
In September 1952, 30 year old Yvonne Gladys Fletcher of Newtown, New South Wales, stood trial befor...
Abstract: This article discusses the sensational trial of the serial poisoner Daisy de Melker in ter...
In 1895 Minnie Dean became the only New Zealand woman to receive the death penalty. In the Invercarg...
This article is a case study of the way the decision to commute a death sentence was reached. The Bi...
"The law should take its course". With this pronouncement, Lieutenant-General Sir William Jervois, G...