Feminism and global justice
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Feminism and global justice
(New directions in critical criminology / edited by Walter S. DeKeseredy, 8)
Routledge, 2015
- : pbk
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this book, Kerry Carrington takes a bold, critical and reflexive approach to understanding the global divisions and inequalities that shape distinctive patterns of gender and crime.
The book argues that in order for feminist criminology to enhance its conceptual and political relevance in the twenty-first century, bold new directions in scholarship on gender, crime and global justice are required that also take into account global divisions and inequalities. Issues explored in the book include the forced marriage of child brides, female genital mutilation, feminicide, honour crimes, rape and domestic violence, and the systemic denial of female rights justified by religion, custom or culture. It also explores rising rates of violence recorded for women offenders globally, and their increasing participation in terrorism, as well as troubling male-on-male violence in anomic spaces cultivated by globalising forces.
Feminism and Global Justice argues that the world needs feminism more than ever to address systemic culturally shaped and diverse forms of injustice experienced by females across the globe, many of them children. It will be essential reading for international and national human rights organisations, as well as academics and students engaged in the study of criminology, development studies, sociology, politics, and gender studies.
Table of Contents
1. Feminism and Global Justice: Introduction 2. Globalising Feminist Criminology: Gender, Crime and Geo-Spatial Inequality 3. Violence Against Women and Women's Struggles for Justice: Asia and Middle East 4. Violence Against Women and Women's struggles for justice: Latin America 5. Masculinity Matters: Super-capitalism, men and violence 6. Female Violence, Torture and Terrorism: Is Feminism Spoiling Girls? 7. New Directions in Transnational Feminist Criminology.
by "Nielsen BookData"