Women & Gender
Showing 17–32 of 126 results
| Title & Subtitle | Abstract | Contributors | Pages | Year | Purchase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
From ![]() NEW! Chapter Three: The Preventable CrimeFrom: Murder in Renfrew County |
This chapter follows the murders of Arlene May, Theresa Davies, and Gillian Hadley in the Renfrew County Area and the two separate inquests that followed their deaths 17 and 13 years before the … | Dean Beeby | 20 | 2024 | $2.00 Add |
|
From ![]() NEW! Chapter Two: Trail of a KillerFrom: Murder in Renfrew County |
This chapter acts as a case study and details how each of Borutski’s former partners found themselves victim to Intimate partner violence. Dean Beeby highlights the unique steps each woman … | Dean Beeby | 84 | 2024 | $8.40 Add |
|
From ![]() Children and the Concept of HarmFrom: Beyond Criminology |
Roy Parker | 18 | 2004 | $1.80 Add | |
|
From ![]() Chapter ThreeFrom: Coming Back to Jail |
Dcolonialism, Capitalism, Patriarchy, and Trauma | Elizabeth Comack | 33 | 2018 | $3.30 Add |
|
From ![]() Coming ApartFrom: No One to Tell |
In this chapter, former RCMP officer Janet Merlo discusses the cumulative impact the work stress was having on her husband Wayne and the rest of the family, as well as the weight of the work of … | Janet Merlo | 9 | 2013 | $0.90 Add |
![]() Coming Back to JailWomen, Trauma, and Criminalization |
Drawing on the stories of forty-two incarcerated women, Coming Back to Jail broadens the focus to examine the role of trauma in the women’s lives. Resisting the popular move to understand trauma … | 272 | View | ||
|
From ![]() Committing and SubmittingFrom: No One to Tell |
In this chapter, Former RCMP officer Janet Merlo discusses her first posting. Discussions include encounters with sexism and violence in the RCMP, as well as institutional efforts to avoid … | Janet Merlo | 20 | 2013 | $2.00 Add |
|
From ![]() NEW! ConclusionFrom: Murder in Renfrew County |
Author Dean Beeby’s conclusion speaks the way in which communities, families and friends begin to heal after losing a loved one to Intimate partner violence. He speaks to how we commemorate … | Dean Beeby | 21 | 2024 | $2.10 Add |
|
From ![]() Conclusion: ‘Social Harm’ and its Limits?From Criminology to Social Harm? From: Beyond Criminology |
Christina Pantazis; Dave Gordon; Paddy Hillyard | 9 | 2004 | $0.90 Add | |
![]() Conflict Is Not AbuseOverstating Harm, Community Responsibility, and the Duty of Repair |
From intimate relationships to global politics, Sarah Schulman observes a continuum: that inflated accusations of harm are used to avoid accountability. Illuminating the difference between … | Sarah Schulman | 304 | 2016 | View |
![]() Criminalizing WomenGender and (In)justice in Neo-Liberal Times, 2nd Edition |
Criminalizing Women introduces readers to the key issues addressed by feminists engaged in criminology research over the past four decades. Chapters explore how narratives that construct women as … | 391 | View | ||
|
From ![]() Dazed, Dangerous, and Dissolute – Media Representations of Street-Level Sex Workers in Vancouver’s Downtown EastsideFrom: Criminalizing Women |
David Hugill | 27 | 2014 | $2.97 Add | |
|
From ![]() Dependency Discourse as Social ControlFrom: An Ideal Prison? |
Shoshana Pollack | 10 | 2005 | $1.00 Add | |
|
From ![]() Discussions of Welfare Fraud in the Canadian News MediaFrom: Gender, Law & Justice |
Kiran Mirchandani; Wendy Chan | 22 | 2016 | $2.20 Add | |
|
From ![]() Drugs Representations of Women in the Drug TradeFrom: Gender, Law & Justice |
Susan C. Boyd | 24 | 2016 | $2.40 Add | |
|
From ![]() Enhancing the Well-Being of Criminalized Indigenous Women – A Contemporary Take on a Traditional Cultural Knowledge FormFrom: Criminalizing Women |
Colleen Anne Dell; Jenny Gardipy | 16 | 2014 | $1.76 Add |












