Despite the increasing numbers of women given community sentences in the UK and in other jurisdictions in recent years, there has been relatively little research into women’s experiences of these disposals. This is particularly surprising given what is known about the distinctive characteristics of women in conflict with the law and the gendered nature of pathways to crime. This article draws upon the experiences of women made subject to a range of community sentences to identify recurring themes including the complexity of women’s problems, the significance of stigma, trauma and abuse, the importance to women of their supervisory relationships, the relevance of self-efficacy and the nature of barriers to compliance. The article...
Most criminal offences in the UK are committed by men which means that women make up a small proport...
Although women represent a small minority of the prison population in all nations, it has long been ...
In 2013 the government promised that new reforms would ‘deliver better outcomes for women offenders’...
Despite the increasing numbers of women given community sentences in the UK and in other jurisdictio...
This article draws on the findings from research undertaken in south-east Scotland in 2008 which sou...
This article draws on the findings from research undertaken in south-east Scotland in 2008 which sou...
Calls for ‘holistic' responses to halt the increasing imprisonment of women are continually re...
Developments in the Probation Service in the 1980s have been dominated by the rhetoric of 'Alte...
First paragraph: Offending by women differs in a number of important ways from offending by men: it ...
This project intended to explore women offenders’, and staff working with them, perspectives’ of com...
Understanding the experiences of criminalised women as they navigate punishment and criminal justice...
The use of imprisonment and non-custodial alternatives for women in Scotland has remained a focus of...
In its Strategic Objectives for Female Offenders (2013) the Coalition government reiterated its supp...
With the numbers of women imprisoned increasing across Western jurisdictions over the last 15 or so ...
Illustrating their arguments with empirical examples drawn from two recent research projects—one cro...
Most criminal offences in the UK are committed by men which means that women make up a small proport...
Although women represent a small minority of the prison population in all nations, it has long been ...
In 2013 the government promised that new reforms would ‘deliver better outcomes for women offenders’...
Despite the increasing numbers of women given community sentences in the UK and in other jurisdictio...
This article draws on the findings from research undertaken in south-east Scotland in 2008 which sou...
This article draws on the findings from research undertaken in south-east Scotland in 2008 which sou...
Calls for ‘holistic' responses to halt the increasing imprisonment of women are continually re...
Developments in the Probation Service in the 1980s have been dominated by the rhetoric of 'Alte...
First paragraph: Offending by women differs in a number of important ways from offending by men: it ...
This project intended to explore women offenders’, and staff working with them, perspectives’ of com...
Understanding the experiences of criminalised women as they navigate punishment and criminal justice...
The use of imprisonment and non-custodial alternatives for women in Scotland has remained a focus of...
In its Strategic Objectives for Female Offenders (2013) the Coalition government reiterated its supp...
With the numbers of women imprisoned increasing across Western jurisdictions over the last 15 or so ...
Illustrating their arguments with empirical examples drawn from two recent research projects—one cro...
Most criminal offences in the UK are committed by men which means that women make up a small proport...
Although women represent a small minority of the prison population in all nations, it has long been ...
In 2013 the government promised that new reforms would ‘deliver better outcomes for women offenders’...