Domestic violence precedes incarceration for many black women, inextricably linking the two events. The two events are linked by: the invisible victimhood of black women and the overcriminalization of black women--implications of their socio-political status, as black women. As black women, social power is limited and the protections provided by law are unavailable at worst, curtailed at best. This informs the domestic abuse paradigm, where their victimhood, quality of being recipients of violence, in the law remains invisible and trivialized by the state. Trivialized in the sense that minimal precautions are taken by police to protect black women, when it is the responsibility of the state as the presiding authority, to protect all citizen...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF VALERIE V. HENDERSON, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Psyc...
A profound, compelling argument for abolition feminism—to protect criminalized survivors of gender-b...
In this article-based dissertation, I investigate how Black women navigate the everyday challenges t...
Black women have a very specific history with the state and law enforcement that is not replicated a...
Domestic abuse is “the willful use of an intimidating action [physical assault, battery, sexual assa...
The purpose of the present effort is to examine the experiences of Black victim-defendants. To begin...
The goal of our senior project is to study using an intersectional lens how race, class, gender, and...
One of the most celebrated successes of the feminist movement is its lasting impact on domestic viol...
In Inner Lives: Voices of African American Women In Prison, Professor Paula Johnson has written abou...
This article is part of a UCLA Law Review symposium, “Overpoliced and Underprotected: Women, Race, a...
For battered women who are forced to kill their attackers, unequal treatment by the law and gendered...
This project aims to disrupt understandings of intimate violence as something that is secluded to th...
The institutions of welfare and incarceration are central in poverty governance. My dissertation bui...
Domestic violence is a distinctive and complex type of violence. The intimate relationship between t...
Domestic violence has been ingrained into the fabric of American culture. In the past, such violence...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF VALERIE V. HENDERSON, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Psyc...
A profound, compelling argument for abolition feminism—to protect criminalized survivors of gender-b...
In this article-based dissertation, I investigate how Black women navigate the everyday challenges t...
Black women have a very specific history with the state and law enforcement that is not replicated a...
Domestic abuse is “the willful use of an intimidating action [physical assault, battery, sexual assa...
The purpose of the present effort is to examine the experiences of Black victim-defendants. To begin...
The goal of our senior project is to study using an intersectional lens how race, class, gender, and...
One of the most celebrated successes of the feminist movement is its lasting impact on domestic viol...
In Inner Lives: Voices of African American Women In Prison, Professor Paula Johnson has written abou...
This article is part of a UCLA Law Review symposium, “Overpoliced and Underprotected: Women, Race, a...
For battered women who are forced to kill their attackers, unequal treatment by the law and gendered...
This project aims to disrupt understandings of intimate violence as something that is secluded to th...
The institutions of welfare and incarceration are central in poverty governance. My dissertation bui...
Domestic violence is a distinctive and complex type of violence. The intimate relationship between t...
Domestic violence has been ingrained into the fabric of American culture. In the past, such violence...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF VALERIE V. HENDERSON, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Psyc...
A profound, compelling argument for abolition feminism—to protect criminalized survivors of gender-b...
In this article-based dissertation, I investigate how Black women navigate the everyday challenges t...