Skip to content
10% OFF EVERYTHING when you spend £20 - Use Code: RWMAR10 - Must end Wednesday 1st 9am
10% OFF EVERYTHING when you spend £20 - Use Code: RWMAR10 - Ends Wednesday 9am

Women’s Criminalisation and Offending in Australia and New Zealand

Victoria M. Nagy
Barcode 9781032140889
Paperback

Original price £53.47 - Original price £53.47
Original price
£53.47
£53.47 - £53.47
Current price £53.47

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Low Stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 06/05/2025

Label: Routledge
Series: Routledge Studies in Crime and Society
Contributors: Victoria M. Nagy (Edited by), Georgina Rychner (Edited by)
Language: English
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Women’s Criminalisation and Offending in Australia and New Zealand offers new research and analysis of women’s offending and criminalisation in Australia and New Zealand from British settlement through to the late-twentieth/early twenty-first century.


Women’s Criminalisation and Offending in Australia and New Zealand offers new research and analysis of women’s offending and criminalisation in Australia and New Zealand from British settlement through to the late twentieth/early twenty-first centuries. Drawing attention to women as offenders as understood in a multitude of ways, this collection highlights how women have been involved with crime and criminal behaviour, their treatment inside and outside of courts and prisons, and how women’s deviation from societal norms have attracted negative attention throughout the decades. For Aboriginal and Māori women especially, the responses were harsher than what they could be for non-indigenous women.

The chapters cover a broad range of transgressions that women have been actively involved with, including theft, drug and alcohol abuse and offences, organised crime, and homicide, as well as how women’s behaviour and their bodies have been criminalised and responded to by authorities. What this collection demonstrates is that women have often chosen to be involved with crime and criminality, while on other occasions their behaviour, innocent as it was, was not considered acceptable by contemporaries, resulting in confusion and misapprehension of women who refused to fit a mould.

Women’s Criminalisation and Offending in Australia and New Zealand brings together historical and criminological methods, theories, and scholars to shed light on how Australia and New Zealand’s colonial, later state, and national governments have sought to understand, control, and punish women. This collection will be of interest and value to scholars, students, and everyone with an interest in criminology, history, law, sociology, Indigenous studies, and Australian and New Zealand studies.