1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910454379803321

Titolo

Women, crime and social harm : towards a criminology for the global age / edited by Maureen Cain and Adrian Howe

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2008

ISBN

1-4725-6456-1

1-282-09396-7

9786612093968

1-84731-470-8

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (234 p.)

Collana

Onati international series in law and society

Disciplina

364.082

Soggetti

Women - Crimes against

Feminist criminology

Crime and globalization

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

"A series published for the Onati Institute for the Sociology of Law"

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index

Nota di contenuto

1. Criminogenesis, the War Against Drugs and Human Rights: (Another) Story of Absented Women -- Maureen Cain -- 2. Violence Against Women: Rethinking the Local-Global Nexus in Feminst Strategy Adrian Howe -- 3. Globalisation, Human Security, Fundamentalism and Women's Rights: Emergent Contradictions Peggy Antrobus -- Part II Women on the Move -- 4. The Gender of Borderpanic: Women in Circuits of Security, State, Globalisation and New (and Old) Empire Suvendrini Perera -- 5. Xeno-racism and the Demonisation of Refugees: A Gendered Perspective Liz Fekete -- 6. Dangerous Liaisons: Sex Work, Globalisation, Morality and the State in Contemporary India Brinda Bose -- Part III Human Rights-Limits and Possibilities -- 7. Global Rights, Local Harms: The Case of the Human Rights of Women in Sub-Saharan Africa Esther Kisaakye -- 8. The Globalisation of International Human Rights Law, Aboriginal Women and the Practice of Aboriginal Customary Law Megan Davis -- Part IV Rethinking Social Harm in a Global Context -- 9. Women and Natural Disasters: State Crime and Discourses in Vulnerability Penny Green -- 10. Global



Feminist Networks on Domestic Violence Rhoda Reddock -- 11. Local Contexts and Globalised Knowledge: What can International Criminal Victimisation Surveys Tell Us About Women's Diverse Lives? Sandra Walklate

Sommario/riassunto

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