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Female Criminality VS Legal Rhetoric: An Exploration into the Legal Discourse Surrounding Canadian Female Offenders

Date

2011-09-22

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

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Publisher

ORCID

Type

Degree Level

Masters

Abstract

An increase in feminist writing within the area of women’s criminalization and public concern about the plight of incarcerated women, challenges criminological research to expand its focus on women’s experiences in prison and women’s reintegration into society to include earlier legal processes, such as their experiences through the court process. The purpose of this research is to examine the discursive constructions, which inform the legal portrayals of women in the criminal courts, to uncover the larger themes that impact the legal representations of these women. I employ a postmodern feminist analysis and a thematic discourse analysis of ten Saskatchewan criminal trial transcripts to highlight a feminist-informed perspective on the legal portrayals of criminalized women. The major themes emerging from the analysis pertained to: gender roles and regulated lifestyles; victimization and dependency; racial images and Aboriginal stereotypes; and, the medicalization of female activity and the criminalization of medical issues. My findings suggest that the themes revealed in the legal discourse contained within the trial transcripts highlight the social constraints affecting women’s activities and roles. This study points to the potential of uniting feminist approaches into an epistemology that fosters collaboration among researchers and activists to amplify the voices of women within the criminal court system.

Description

Keywords

feminism, law, discourse analysis, gender, race, criminal court, postmodernism, standpoint feminism, anti oppressive theory

Citation

Degree

Master of Arts (M.A.)

Department

Sociology

Program

Sociology

Citation

Part Of

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DOI

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