In this article, we argue that feminist legal scholars should engage directly and explicitly with the question of evil. Part I summarises key facts surrounding the prosecution and life-long imprisonment of Myra Hindley, one of a tiny number of women involved in multiple killings of children in recent British history. Part II reviews a range of commentaries on Hindley, noting in particular the repeated use of two narratives: the first of these insists that Hindley is an icon of female evil; the second, less popular one, seeks to position her as a victim. In Part III, the article broadens out and we explain why we think feminist legal scholars should look at the question of evil. In large part, the emphasis is on anticipating the range of pos...
This thesis focuses upon media and legal representations of five case studies of women who kill take...
Part One of this article provides a phenomenological and hedonic critique of the conception of the h...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
In this article, we argue that feminist legal scholars should engage directly and explicitly with th...
In cases where mothers were wrongfully convicted of killing their children, both forensic and non-fo...
Myra Hindley & Ian Brady, known as the Moors Murderers, abducted, sexually assaulted, tortured and m...
In this article I explore the ways in which legal language, discourses, and narratives construct new...
The major currents driving legal theory have largely bypassed the field of criminal law. Neither the...
Women commit significantly fewer murders than men and are perceived to be less violent. This belief ...
This article makes a contribution to current debates about gender and punishment by providing an his...
© 2012, (publisher). All rights reserved. In February 2000, Katherine Mary Knight killed, then skinn...
The purpose of the article is to explore Girard’s (1986) concept of the scapegoat, from a feminist p...
Between 1975 and 1980, 13 women, 7 of whom were sex workers, were murdered in the North of England. ...
This article offers a history of the English legal category monster, a legal category that entered E...
Women who kill are frequently subject to discourses of pathology. This article examines the cases of...
This thesis focuses upon media and legal representations of five case studies of women who kill take...
Part One of this article provides a phenomenological and hedonic critique of the conception of the h...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
In this article, we argue that feminist legal scholars should engage directly and explicitly with th...
In cases where mothers were wrongfully convicted of killing their children, both forensic and non-fo...
Myra Hindley & Ian Brady, known as the Moors Murderers, abducted, sexually assaulted, tortured and m...
In this article I explore the ways in which legal language, discourses, and narratives construct new...
The major currents driving legal theory have largely bypassed the field of criminal law. Neither the...
Women commit significantly fewer murders than men and are perceived to be less violent. This belief ...
This article makes a contribution to current debates about gender and punishment by providing an his...
© 2012, (publisher). All rights reserved. In February 2000, Katherine Mary Knight killed, then skinn...
The purpose of the article is to explore Girard’s (1986) concept of the scapegoat, from a feminist p...
Between 1975 and 1980, 13 women, 7 of whom were sex workers, were murdered in the North of England. ...
This article offers a history of the English legal category monster, a legal category that entered E...
Women who kill are frequently subject to discourses of pathology. This article examines the cases of...
This thesis focuses upon media and legal representations of five case studies of women who kill take...
Part One of this article provides a phenomenological and hedonic critique of the conception of the h...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...