This article emerges from a study of female offenders’ participation in police-facilitated restorative justice in one county in England. The qualitative study, presented here, is based on life history interviews with twelve women and focuses on three morality tales that emerged through narrative analysis: ‘offending as play,’ ‘the strong woman’ and ‘work and a normal life.’ The women used these tales to protect self-worth and justify ‘bad’ behavior in order to counter professional responses which they viewed as stigmatising. The paper concludes with implications for practice with girls and women who offend, which may benefit police, probation and social workers
In Her Own Words: Women Offenders\u27 Views on Crime and Victimization offers first-hand accounts of...
Historically offending theories have concentrated on external factors as explanations for offending ...
This article reports on a qualitative study in the UK of women as co-offenders, their pathways into ...
This research is a mixed-methods study of young women who offended and were referred to police-facil...
It is recognised that women who have offended comprise a vulnerable group having commonly experience...
Purpose: Although there is a vast array of theories on crime, one area that is largely under-represe...
The steep rise in female offenders since the 1960s has finally caused criminologists, lawyers, judge...
This article reports on the uses of police-led restorative justice (RJ) for female offenders by one ...
This article critiques the focus on responsibilisation of criminalised women within desistance resea...
The contemporary popularity of restorative justice, within youth justice, has expanded significantly...
The contemporary popularity of restorative justice, within youth justice, has expanded significantly...
This hermeneutic study examines the lived experience of one female juvenile offender as she went thr...
This thesis considers the experiences of female offenders in their efforts to desist from offending....
Desistance theorizing has concentrated on the male experience resulting in relatively less knowledge...
This dissertation examines how formerly incarcerated mothers manage the moral ambiguity associated w...
In Her Own Words: Women Offenders\u27 Views on Crime and Victimization offers first-hand accounts of...
Historically offending theories have concentrated on external factors as explanations for offending ...
This article reports on a qualitative study in the UK of women as co-offenders, their pathways into ...
This research is a mixed-methods study of young women who offended and were referred to police-facil...
It is recognised that women who have offended comprise a vulnerable group having commonly experience...
Purpose: Although there is a vast array of theories on crime, one area that is largely under-represe...
The steep rise in female offenders since the 1960s has finally caused criminologists, lawyers, judge...
This article reports on the uses of police-led restorative justice (RJ) for female offenders by one ...
This article critiques the focus on responsibilisation of criminalised women within desistance resea...
The contemporary popularity of restorative justice, within youth justice, has expanded significantly...
The contemporary popularity of restorative justice, within youth justice, has expanded significantly...
This hermeneutic study examines the lived experience of one female juvenile offender as she went thr...
This thesis considers the experiences of female offenders in their efforts to desist from offending....
Desistance theorizing has concentrated on the male experience resulting in relatively less knowledge...
This dissertation examines how formerly incarcerated mothers manage the moral ambiguity associated w...
In Her Own Words: Women Offenders\u27 Views on Crime and Victimization offers first-hand accounts of...
Historically offending theories have concentrated on external factors as explanations for offending ...
This article reports on a qualitative study in the UK of women as co-offenders, their pathways into ...