This article considers the potential of rights-based advocacy to respond to the troubling reality of a growing women\u27s prison population, and it makes an attempt to sketch out an approach to advocacy and scholarship that seeks both liberty and substantive equality for criminalized and imprisoned women. It proceeds in four parts. First, it documents some of the legislative and policy changes made to sentencing and penal law in the last decade. Next, it identifies some of the ways that these changes have an impact on women and on particular groups of women. It then suggests some ways that academics, lawyers, law students, and other feminist advocates might have a role in resisting the punishment agenda and seeking liberty and substantive e...
Indigenous women make up a disproportionate percentage of incarcerated women in Canada. The effects ...
This thesis focuses on justice and women's groups perceptions regarding the possibility of a woman-c...
The Canadian government's Task Force Report on Federally Sentenced Women, Creating Choices (1990), p...
This article considers the potential of rights-based advocacy to respond to the troubling reality of...
From the article: My purpose here is to situate gender as a key factor in a historical movement towa...
The existing research into effective accountability and oversight of Canadian prisons has considered...
penitentiary as an alternative to the death penalty. In their vision, lawbreakers would be confined ...
This article examines women’s imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Women are now the fastest rising prison population in the world (Balfour & Comack, 2006). As more an...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study is an examination of the impact of systemic oppre...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Criminalized Aboriginal women continue to be overrepresented in Canadian prisons. Research demonstra...
Aboriginal women are dramatically over-represented within Canada’s prison population, accounting for...
Incarceration rates are on the rise in Australia, particularly for women. For female prisoners, issu...
The rate of female incarceration continues to surge, resulting in over 714,000 women currently being...
Indigenous women make up a disproportionate percentage of incarcerated women in Canada. The effects ...
This thesis focuses on justice and women's groups perceptions regarding the possibility of a woman-c...
The Canadian government's Task Force Report on Federally Sentenced Women, Creating Choices (1990), p...
This article considers the potential of rights-based advocacy to respond to the troubling reality of...
From the article: My purpose here is to situate gender as a key factor in a historical movement towa...
The existing research into effective accountability and oversight of Canadian prisons has considered...
penitentiary as an alternative to the death penalty. In their vision, lawbreakers would be confined ...
This article examines women’s imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Women are now the fastest rising prison population in the world (Balfour & Comack, 2006). As more an...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study is an examination of the impact of systemic oppre...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Criminalized Aboriginal women continue to be overrepresented in Canadian prisons. Research demonstra...
Aboriginal women are dramatically over-represented within Canada’s prison population, accounting for...
Incarceration rates are on the rise in Australia, particularly for women. For female prisoners, issu...
The rate of female incarceration continues to surge, resulting in over 714,000 women currently being...
Indigenous women make up a disproportionate percentage of incarcerated women in Canada. The effects ...
This thesis focuses on justice and women's groups perceptions regarding the possibility of a woman-c...
The Canadian government's Task Force Report on Federally Sentenced Women, Creating Choices (1990), p...