This article examines the reason for the passage of the 1922 Infanticide Act, arguing that it owes much to the influence and work of women’s policy networks. Historians have disagreed as to why the Act was passed with relative suddenness in the early 1920s, at a time when infanticide was generally considered a much less pressing social issue than it had been in Victorian England. Moreover, several Bills brought between 1908 and 1913 proposing that the law on this subject be amended so that women who killed their newborns no longer faced the death penalty had all failed. Importantly, the roles of juror and lay magistrate had become open to women in 1920, following the passage of the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919. The public interes...
Writing for Frontier, PhD student Joshua Stuart-Bennett explains his research into the child killing...
This article examines the relationship between the introduction of women Justices of the Peace (JPs)...
The prevailing public view on women who kill their babies is that they are either monsters or psycho...
This article examines the reason for the passage of the 1922 Infanticide Act, arguing that it owes m...
The offence of infanticide is allegedly based in debunked and sexist ideas about women and pregnancy...
Antifemale bias permeating across the world has perhaps percolated in the perpetuation of the awful ...
© Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 2023. This is the accepted manuscript version of a book chapter which ha...
The crime of infanticide plagued England throughout the nineteenth century, but by the 1860s it seem...
Throughout the history of journalism the notion of a mother killing her infant child—committing an a...
The purpose of this study is to examine how the political cohesion of American women led to the pass...
“The Contradictions of Reform” analyses the complications of reform of legislation regulating punish...
This article highlights the long history of activism associated with the Mothers' Union since its in...
This article uses legal cases regarding infanticide in the American South to examine the intersectio...
In early 1920 women in England and Wales sat as Justices of the Peace (JPs) for the first time, beco...
© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an a...
Writing for Frontier, PhD student Joshua Stuart-Bennett explains his research into the child killing...
This article examines the relationship between the introduction of women Justices of the Peace (JPs)...
The prevailing public view on women who kill their babies is that they are either monsters or psycho...
This article examines the reason for the passage of the 1922 Infanticide Act, arguing that it owes m...
The offence of infanticide is allegedly based in debunked and sexist ideas about women and pregnancy...
Antifemale bias permeating across the world has perhaps percolated in the perpetuation of the awful ...
© Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 2023. This is the accepted manuscript version of a book chapter which ha...
The crime of infanticide plagued England throughout the nineteenth century, but by the 1860s it seem...
Throughout the history of journalism the notion of a mother killing her infant child—committing an a...
The purpose of this study is to examine how the political cohesion of American women led to the pass...
“The Contradictions of Reform” analyses the complications of reform of legislation regulating punish...
This article highlights the long history of activism associated with the Mothers' Union since its in...
This article uses legal cases regarding infanticide in the American South to examine the intersectio...
In early 1920 women in England and Wales sat as Justices of the Peace (JPs) for the first time, beco...
© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an a...
Writing for Frontier, PhD student Joshua Stuart-Bennett explains his research into the child killing...
This article examines the relationship between the introduction of women Justices of the Peace (JPs)...
The prevailing public view on women who kill their babies is that they are either monsters or psycho...