|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
Explores 'crimes of passion' through Shakespeare texts.
Interdisciplinary approach. Will appeal to feminist and socio-legal
scholars, criminologists and those working in the fields of law and
literature, legal theory and Shakespeare studies.
What happens when you sex violent crimes? More specifically, what
happens when you make men's violence against women the subject of a
conversation or the focus of scholarly attention? The short answer
is: all hell breaks loose. Adrian Howe explores some of the ways in
which this persistent and pervasive form of violence has been named
and unnamed as a significant social problem in western countries
over the past four decades. Addressing what she calls the 'Man'
question-so named because it pays attention to the discursive place
occupied, or more usually vacated, by men in accounts of their
violence against women-she explores what happens when that violence
is placed on the criminological and political agenda. Written in a
theoretically-informed yet accessible style, Sex, Violence and
Crime-Foucault and the 'Man' Question provides a novel and highly
original approach to questions of sex and violence in contemporary
western society. Directed at criminologists, students and, more
widely, at anyone interested in these issues, it challenges readers
to come to grips with postmodern feminist reconceptualisations of
the fraught relationship between sex, violence and crime in order
to better combat men's violence against women and children.
What happens when you sex violent crimes? More specifically, what
happens when you make men's violence against women the subject of a
conversation or the focus of scholarly attention? The short answer
is: all hell breaks loose. Adrian Howe explores some of the ways in
which this persistent and pervasive form of violence has been named
and unnamed as a significant social problem in western countries
over the past four decades. Addressing what she calls the 'Man'
question-so named because it pays attention to the discursive place
occupied, or more usually vacated, by men in accounts of their
violence against women-she explores what happens when that violence
is placed on the criminological and political agenda. Written in a
theoretically-informed yet accessible style, Sex, Violence and
Crime-Foucault and the 'Man' Question provides a novel and highly
original approach to questions of sex and violence in contemporary
western society. Directed at criminologists, students and, more
widely, at anyone interested in these issues, it challenges readers
to come to grips with postmodern feminist reconceptualisations of
the fraught relationship between sex, violence and crime in order
to better combat men's violence against women and children.
This book of eleven chapters and an Introduction is by and about
women, the harms and crimes to which they are subjected as a result
of global social processes and their efforts to take control of
their own futures. The chapters explore the criminogenic and
damaging consequences of the policies of the global financial
institutions as well as the effects of growing economic
polarisation both in pockets of the developed world and most
markedly in the global south. Reflecting on this evidence, in the
Introduction the editors necessarily challenge existing
criminological theory by expanding and elaborating a conception of
social harm that encompasses this range of problems, and exposes
where new solutions derived from criminological theory are
necessary. A second theme addresses human rights from the
standpoint of indigenous women, minority women and those seeking
refuge. Inadequate and individualised as the human rights
instruments presently are, for most of these women a politics of
human rights emerges as central to the achieving of legal and
political equality and protection from individual violence. Women
in the poorest countries, however, are sceptical as to the efficacy
of rights claims in the face of the depredations of international
and global capital, and the social dislocation produced thereby.
Nonetheless this is a hopeful book, emphasising the contribution
which academic work can make, provided the methodology is
appropriately gendered and sufficiently sensitive in its guiding
ideology and techniques to hear and learn from the all too often
'glocalised' other. But in the end there is no solution without
politics, and in both the opening and the closing sections of this
book there are chapters which address this. What continues to be
special about women's political practice is the connection between
the groundedness of small groups and the fluidity and flexibility
of regional and international networks: the effective politics of
the global age. This book, then, is a new criminology for and by
women, a book which opens up a new criminological terrain for both
women and men - and a book which cannot easily be read without an
emotional response.
Focusing on femicide, this book provides a contemporary
re-evaluation of Carol Smart's innovative approach to the law
question as first outlined in her ground-breaking book, Feminism
and the Power of Law (Routledge 1989). Smart advocated turning to
the legal domain not so much for demanding law reforms as
construing it as a site on which to contest gender and more
particularly, gendered constructions of women's experiences. Over
the last 30 to 40 years, feminist law scholars and activists have
launched scathing trans-jurisdictional critiques of the operation
of provocation defences in hundreds of femicide cases. The evidence
unearthed by feminist scholars that these defences operate in
profoundly sexed ways is unequivocal. Accordingly, femicide cases
have become critically important sites for feminist engagement and
intervention across numerous jurisdictions. Exploring an area of
criminal law that was not one of Smart's own focal concerns, this
book both honours and extends Smart's work by approaching femicide
as a site of engagement and counter-discourse that calls into
question hegemonic representations of gendered relationships.
Femicide cases thus provide a way to continue the endlessly
valuable discursive work Smart advocated and practised in other
fields of law: both in articulating alternative accounts of
gendered relationships and in challenging law's power to disqualify
women's experiences of violence while privileging men's feelings
and rights.
Over the past 25 years, a range of critical - that is, Marxist,
poststructuralist and, less frequently, feminist - perspectives has
been brought to bear on the subject of punishment and, in
particular, on the question of imprisonment in western capitalist
societies. Considered together, these critical views challenge
traditional ways of conceptualizing punishment. Yet, for all the
advances made, the new critical perspectives remain deeply flawed
in a significant, but as yet barely acknowledged way - with very
few exceptions they are profoundly masculinist. Punish and Critique
begins the task of exploring what a theoretically-informed feminist
analysis of penality might look like and, in the process, uncovers
a series of disjunctions in the recent critical analyses - for
example, disjunctions between social histories' of prison regimes
imposed on men and feminist histories of the imprisonment of women.
Over the past 25 years, a range of critical - that is, Marxist,
poststructuralist and, less frequently, feminist - perspectives has
been brought to bear on the subject of punishment and, in
particular, on the question of imprisonment in western capitalist
societies. Considered together, these critical views challenge
traditional ways of conceptualizing punishment. Yet, for all the
advances made, the new critical perspectives remain deeply flawed
in a significant, but as yet barely acknowledged way - with very
few exceptions they are profoundly masculinist. Punish and Critique
begins the task of exploring what a theoretically-informed feminist
analysis of penality might look like and, in the process, uncovers
a series of disjunctions in the recent critical analyses - for
example, disjunctions between social histories' of prison regimes
imposed on men and feminist histories of the imprisonment of women.
Focusing on femicide, this book provides a contemporary
re-evaluation of Carol Smart's innovative approach to the law
question as first outlined in her ground-breaking book, Feminism
and the Power of Law (Routledge 1989). Smart advocated turning to
the legal domain not so much for demanding law reforms as
construing it as a site on which to contest gender and more
particularly, gendered constructions of women's experiences. Over
the last 30 to 40 years, feminist law scholars and activists have
launched scathing trans-jurisdictional critiques of the operation
of provocation defences in hundreds of femicide cases. The evidence
unearthed by feminist scholars that these defences operate in
profoundly sexed ways is unequivocal. Accordingly, femicide cases
have become critically important sites for feminist engagement and
intervention across numerous jurisdictions. Exploring an area of
criminal law that was not one of Smart's own focal concerns, this
book both honours and extends Smart's work by approaching femicide
as a site of engagement and counter-discourse that calls into
question hegemonic representations of gendered relationships.
Femicide cases thus provide a way to continue the endlessly
valuable discursive work Smart advocated and practised in other
fields of law: both in articulating alternative accounts of
gendered relationships and in challenging law's power to disqualify
women's experiences of violence while privileging men's feelings
and rights.
This book of eleven chapters and an Introduction is by and about
women, the harms and crimes to which they are subjected as a result
of global social processes and their efforts to take control of
their own futures. The chapters explore the criminogenic and
damaging consequences of the policies of the global financial
institutions as well as the effects of growing economic
polarisation both in pockets of the developed world and most
markedly in the global south. Reflecting on this evidence, in the
Introduction the editors necessarily challenge existing
criminological theory by expanding and elaborating a conception of
social harm that encompasses this range of problems, and exposes
where new solutions derived from criminological theory are
necessary. A second theme addresses human rights from the
standpoint of indigenous women, minority women and those seeking
refuge. Inadequate and individualised as the human rights
instruments presently are, for most of these women a politics of
human rights emerges as central to the achieving of legal and
political equality and protection from individual violence. Women
in the poorest countries, however, are sceptical as to the efficacy
of rights claims in the face of the depredations of international
and global capital, and the social dislocation produced thereby.
Nonetheless this is a hopeful book, emphasising the contribution
which academic work can make, provided the methodology is
appropriately gendered and sufficiently sensitive in its guiding
ideology and techniques to hear and learn from the all too often
'glocalised' other. But in the end there is no solution without
politics, and in both the opening and the closing sections of this
book there are chapters which address this. What continues to be
special about women's political practice is the connection between
the groundedness of small groups and the fluidity and flexibility
of regional and international networks: the effective politics of
the global age. This book, then, is a new criminology for and by
women, a book which opens up a new criminological terrain for both
women and men - and a book which cannot easily be read without an
emotional response.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Fast X
Vin Diesel, Jason Momoa, …
DVD
R132
Discovery Miles 1 320
|