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Sexism and The Female Offender

NCJ Number
126435
Author(s)
L Gelsthorpe
Date Published
1989
Length
194 pages
Annotation
Because there are fewer female than male offenders dealt with by the criminal justice system, there has been a tendency to view female criminality in terms of individual characteristics and only peripherally in terms of social forces and influences.
Abstract
Female offenders have always been thought of in different ways from male offenders, as less delinquent, less dangerous, and less involved in criminal subcultures and as a consequence they have less frequently provided a focus for criminological theory. The treatment of young females in three modern practice settings -- an observation/assessment center, a police juvenile bureau, and a regional "secure" assessment/remand center -- was documented to examine what practitioners think about their clients and how complicated the notion of sexism becomes once it is placed in an administrative context. It is concluded that images of female offenders are mediated by a whole host of factors that cannot be linked directly to sexist ideology. 4 tables, 1 figure, 157 notes, appendix, bibliography, and index