© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Larceny from the person, or pickpocketing, was the most common form of indictable crime committed by female offenders in turn-of-the-century Melbourne. It was an offence particularly likely to appear within the criminal careers of recidivist female offenders. Female pickpocketing, however, was notoriously difficult to prosecute. The usual differences found in trial outcomes for men and women were exacerbated by the specific contexts in which such robberies occurred, that is in the context of solicitation or sex work. This not only meant victims were reluctant to prosecute, but that women’s offending often took place within criminal subcultures that fostered interpersonal relation...
This article examines the origins of procurement offences and their historical development in Englan...
This chapter considers societal discourses about young people, based on historical assumptions conce...
Janine Hatter examines Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s 1870s sensation fiction and the changing relationshi...
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Burglary and pickpocke...
This thesis focuses on serious female offenders living in Liverpool and London during the Victorian ...
The belief that women secretly hate other women is one with a long history. This article highlights ...
'When they are all thrown together it is impossible to improve them', declared turnkey Sarah Ann Nix...
Between 1919 and 1936 proceedings for solicitation in Liverpool fell by 98%, with the city having go...
Since historians first began to mine the records of the 160,000 men, women and children who were tra...
'The hand that rocks the cradle' is a phrase indicative of motherhood, the world, and change. When a...
In recent decades, historians have produced a wealth of scholarship demonstrating the importance of ...
This thesis examines the lives and work of prostitutes in London, Ontario, from 1880 to 1885. The ci...
“Skirting the Law: Sensationalism and Spectacle of British Murderesses from the 1830s to the 1860s” ...
Prior to the passage of the Canadian Criminal Code (CCC) in 1892, prostitution was considered a publ...
In the nineteenth century, a gendered reform movement – the Slander of Women Acts – swept through th...
This article examines the origins of procurement offences and their historical development in Englan...
This chapter considers societal discourses about young people, based on historical assumptions conce...
Janine Hatter examines Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s 1870s sensation fiction and the changing relationshi...
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Burglary and pickpocke...
This thesis focuses on serious female offenders living in Liverpool and London during the Victorian ...
The belief that women secretly hate other women is one with a long history. This article highlights ...
'When they are all thrown together it is impossible to improve them', declared turnkey Sarah Ann Nix...
Between 1919 and 1936 proceedings for solicitation in Liverpool fell by 98%, with the city having go...
Since historians first began to mine the records of the 160,000 men, women and children who were tra...
'The hand that rocks the cradle' is a phrase indicative of motherhood, the world, and change. When a...
In recent decades, historians have produced a wealth of scholarship demonstrating the importance of ...
This thesis examines the lives and work of prostitutes in London, Ontario, from 1880 to 1885. The ci...
“Skirting the Law: Sensationalism and Spectacle of British Murderesses from the 1830s to the 1860s” ...
Prior to the passage of the Canadian Criminal Code (CCC) in 1892, prostitution was considered a publ...
In the nineteenth century, a gendered reform movement – the Slander of Women Acts – swept through th...
This article examines the origins of procurement offences and their historical development in Englan...
This chapter considers societal discourses about young people, based on historical assumptions conce...
Janine Hatter examines Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s 1870s sensation fiction and the changing relationshi...