This article contributes to feminist state theory and studies of women\u27s police stations in Latin America by examining the processes shaping the multiple and changing positions of explicit alliance, opposition, and ambiguous alliance assumed by policewomen regarding feminists since the creation of the world\u27s first women\u27s police station in 1985 in São Paulo. While studies of women\u27s police stations tend to overlook the political conjuncture, much of the literature on the state and gender explains the relationship between the state and women\u27s movements as a function of the political regime. I argue for a more grounded feminist state theory, taking into account interactive macro and micro, local and international forces. As t...
Women’s entry into policing, a traditionally masculine occupation, has been theorized almost entirel...
In the first half of the twentieth century, women police played a small yet active role in the New Y...
The article discusses the role of the police in early twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro, focusing on ...
Women’s police stations are a distinctive innovation that emerged in postcolonial nations of the glo...
yesThis article examines an innovative domestic violence intervention: some 300 ‘second-response’ po...
Writing on policing and violence against women from a gender perspective is a relatively recent and ...
Women’s police stations are a distinctive innovation that emerged in postcolonial nations of the glo...
With the purge of the Military Forces and the creation of a new National Civilian Police (PNC) as ma...
The criminalisation of domestic violence during the 1970s and 1980s was lauded by feminists as a vic...
Women’s Police Stations are unique innovations that emerged in post-colonial nations of the Global S...
In the context of increasing prosecution by victims of domestic violence, this article compares prof...
Peer Editor: Morgan Grossman-McKee; Faculty Mentor: Jami Ake Directed by feminist pressure to respon...
NoGlobal concern about feminicide -- the killing of girls or women for reasons related to gender ro...
This article examines the responses of the State to feminist demands to combat domestic violence aga...
Can gender-based “enclaves” facilitate women’s access to justice? I examine all-female police statio...
Women’s entry into policing, a traditionally masculine occupation, has been theorized almost entirel...
In the first half of the twentieth century, women police played a small yet active role in the New Y...
The article discusses the role of the police in early twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro, focusing on ...
Women’s police stations are a distinctive innovation that emerged in postcolonial nations of the glo...
yesThis article examines an innovative domestic violence intervention: some 300 ‘second-response’ po...
Writing on policing and violence against women from a gender perspective is a relatively recent and ...
Women’s police stations are a distinctive innovation that emerged in postcolonial nations of the glo...
With the purge of the Military Forces and the creation of a new National Civilian Police (PNC) as ma...
The criminalisation of domestic violence during the 1970s and 1980s was lauded by feminists as a vic...
Women’s Police Stations are unique innovations that emerged in post-colonial nations of the Global S...
In the context of increasing prosecution by victims of domestic violence, this article compares prof...
Peer Editor: Morgan Grossman-McKee; Faculty Mentor: Jami Ake Directed by feminist pressure to respon...
NoGlobal concern about feminicide -- the killing of girls or women for reasons related to gender ro...
This article examines the responses of the State to feminist demands to combat domestic violence aga...
Can gender-based “enclaves” facilitate women’s access to justice? I examine all-female police statio...
Women’s entry into policing, a traditionally masculine occupation, has been theorized almost entirel...
In the first half of the twentieth century, women police played a small yet active role in the New Y...
The article discusses the role of the police in early twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro, focusing on ...