Women commit significantly fewer murders than men and are perceived to be less violent. This belief about women’s non-violence reflects the discourses surrounding gender, all of which assume that women possess certain inherent essential characteristics such as passivity and gentleness. When women commit murder the fundamental social structures based on appropriate feminine gendered behaviour are contradicted and subsequently challenged. This article will explore the gendered constructions of women who kill within the criminal justice system. These women are labelled as either mad, bad or a victim, by both the criminal justice system and society, depending on the construction of their crime, their gender and their sexuality. Symbiotic to lab...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 82-89).This study critiques how U.S.-based media portray ...
of homicide. One should start such a discussion with an acknowledgment of the relative rarity of suc...
Misogyny is often evident in women’s experiences of (hate) victimisation. Debates are ongoing about ...
Women commit significantly fewer murders than men and are perceived to be less violent. This belief ...
In this article I explore the ways in which legal language, discourses, and narratives construct new...
Women who kill are frequently subject to discourses of pathology. This article examines the cases of...
This article makes a contribution to current debates about gender and punishment by providing an his...
This thesis will explore the socio-legal response(s) to women who kill. Interrogating the constructi...
My thesis examines the treatment of women who kill their violent male partners within the Australian...
The defence of diminished responsibility was introduced in the Homicide Act 1957. As a defence to mu...
In this Article, Professor Goldfarb examines the construction of gender roles in the discourse on in...
D.Litt. et Phil.Ewing (1997) states that battered women who kill intimate male partners have not bee...
A quantitative and qualitative examination of seventy-three domestic homicide cases in California su...
For battered women who are forced to kill their attackers, unequal treatment by the law and gendered...
In this article, we take a novel approach to analysing English sentencing remarks in cases of women ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 82-89).This study critiques how U.S.-based media portray ...
of homicide. One should start such a discussion with an acknowledgment of the relative rarity of suc...
Misogyny is often evident in women’s experiences of (hate) victimisation. Debates are ongoing about ...
Women commit significantly fewer murders than men and are perceived to be less violent. This belief ...
In this article I explore the ways in which legal language, discourses, and narratives construct new...
Women who kill are frequently subject to discourses of pathology. This article examines the cases of...
This article makes a contribution to current debates about gender and punishment by providing an his...
This thesis will explore the socio-legal response(s) to women who kill. Interrogating the constructi...
My thesis examines the treatment of women who kill their violent male partners within the Australian...
The defence of diminished responsibility was introduced in the Homicide Act 1957. As a defence to mu...
In this Article, Professor Goldfarb examines the construction of gender roles in the discourse on in...
D.Litt. et Phil.Ewing (1997) states that battered women who kill intimate male partners have not bee...
A quantitative and qualitative examination of seventy-three domestic homicide cases in California su...
For battered women who are forced to kill their attackers, unequal treatment by the law and gendered...
In this article, we take a novel approach to analysing English sentencing remarks in cases of women ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 82-89).This study critiques how U.S.-based media portray ...
of homicide. One should start such a discussion with an acknowledgment of the relative rarity of suc...
Misogyny is often evident in women’s experiences of (hate) victimisation. Debates are ongoing about ...