The Elizabeth Fry Society of Montreal conducted a study aimed at describing the judicial profile of women defendants from their appearance to their sentencing. This article presents the principal results of this study which concerns more than 1 500 women who appeared, in 1987, before the Quebec Criminal Court, at the Court houses at Montreal and Longueuil. Whether more than half these women are under 30 years of age, that they have never been charged before, that they are charged on one court only and of crimes against property, that they plead guilty and receive a probation order, very often the course of women through the judicial process is far from being linear. Once caught up in the syst...
This paper provides an overview of some of the changes undergone by the juvenile justice system in Q...
This study is a theoretical and empirical analysis of the new tripartite structure of sexual ...
Ce texte propose une relecture des rapports entre les femmes et l’État, plus de dix ans après la pub...
Some of the issues related to the incarceration of women have long been denounced and are wel...
Women offenders had traditionally been neglected in criminological theory as well as in empir...
Between 1867 and 1976, when the death penalty was abolished in Canada, sixteen women faced the death...
In this article, the author examines the socio-legal relevance of the « battered woman syndrome » (B...
Les sources de la pratique judiciaire du xve siècle dans les Pays-Bas bourguignons font apparaître, ...
This paper tries to shed a light on the attrition process and on the factors influencing the sentenc...
This article addresses the issue of the particular categories and degrees of constraints imposed upo...
This paper analyses feminist initiatives to use law, particularly the criminal justice system, to he...
In October 1987, an experimental program was introduced in the Montreal Law Courts, inviting victims...
This article presents the principal results of a study on plea bargaining at the Montreal Jus...
Les auteures reprennent la célèbre question de Madame la juge Bertha Wilson « Est-ce que les femmes ...
Engagé vis-à-vis de ces femmes, cet article décrira les origines des prisons québécoises et canadien...
This paper provides an overview of some of the changes undergone by the juvenile justice system in Q...
This study is a theoretical and empirical analysis of the new tripartite structure of sexual ...
Ce texte propose une relecture des rapports entre les femmes et l’État, plus de dix ans après la pub...
Some of the issues related to the incarceration of women have long been denounced and are wel...
Women offenders had traditionally been neglected in criminological theory as well as in empir...
Between 1867 and 1976, when the death penalty was abolished in Canada, sixteen women faced the death...
In this article, the author examines the socio-legal relevance of the « battered woman syndrome » (B...
Les sources de la pratique judiciaire du xve siècle dans les Pays-Bas bourguignons font apparaître, ...
This paper tries to shed a light on the attrition process and on the factors influencing the sentenc...
This article addresses the issue of the particular categories and degrees of constraints imposed upo...
This paper analyses feminist initiatives to use law, particularly the criminal justice system, to he...
In October 1987, an experimental program was introduced in the Montreal Law Courts, inviting victims...
This article presents the principal results of a study on plea bargaining at the Montreal Jus...
Les auteures reprennent la célèbre question de Madame la juge Bertha Wilson « Est-ce que les femmes ...
Engagé vis-à-vis de ces femmes, cet article décrira les origines des prisons québécoises et canadien...
This paper provides an overview of some of the changes undergone by the juvenile justice system in Q...
This study is a theoretical and empirical analysis of the new tripartite structure of sexual ...
Ce texte propose une relecture des rapports entre les femmes et l’État, plus de dix ans après la pub...