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Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes

Maurice Vanstone Orcid Logo, Anne Worrall

The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice, Pages: 1 - 15

Swansea University Author: Maurice Vanstone Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/hojo.12584

Abstract

There has not been a specific history of supervising women in the community. This article, therefore, describes the early neglect of work with women and the period of change from the 1970s when women became more visible and the criminal justice system's response to them began to face scrutiny....

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Published in: The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice
ISSN: 2059-1098 2059-1101
Published: Wiley 2024
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa68134
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first_indexed 2024-11-01T11:08:29Z
last_indexed 2024-11-01T11:08:29Z
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spelling v2 68134 2024-11-01 Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes 864a9053f10baa6bb4e945fae31ad799 0000-0003-2758-1610 Maurice Vanstone Maurice Vanstone true false 2024-11-01 HRCL There has not been a specific history of supervising women in the community. This article, therefore, describes the early neglect of work with women and the period of change from the 1970s when women became more visible and the criminal justice system's response to them began to face scrutiny. It posits the story against the background of increased awareness of gender discrimination and efforts to reduce the use of imprisonment by addressing women's criminogenic and social needs through community‐based supervision. It juxtaposes innovative work initiated by practitioners and managers to years of unfulfilled policy promises. An essential part of the story is the attempt to integrate feminist perspectives into policy and practice at a time of organisational and political turbulence. It concludes that our increased understanding of criminalised women presents the opportunity of breaking the frustrating cycle of governmental ‘enthusiasm‐disillusion‐indifference’ and making a genuine contribution to equality and social justice. Journal Article The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice 0 1 15 Wiley 2059-1098 2059-1101 Criminal and social justice, history, probation, rehabilitation, women and the courts 22 10 2024 2024-10-22 10.1111/hojo.12584 COLLEGE NANME Hillary Rodham Clinton Law School COLLEGE CODE HRCL Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) 2024-11-01T11:09:30.2978524 2024-11-01T10:58:51.3389713 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law Maurice Vanstone 0000-0003-2758-1610 1 Anne Worrall 2 68134__32813__f45540524cbf4e1b978a2bb5d8b6e52d.pdf 68134.VOR.pdf 2024-11-01T11:04:44.1579136 Output 259339 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2024 The Author(s). This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0). true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
spellingShingle Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
Maurice Vanstone
title_short Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
title_full Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
title_fullStr Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
title_full_unstemmed Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
title_sort Supervising criminalised women in the community in England and Wales: A brief history of (un)changing attitudes
author_id_str_mv 864a9053f10baa6bb4e945fae31ad799
author_id_fullname_str_mv 864a9053f10baa6bb4e945fae31ad799_***_Maurice Vanstone
author Maurice Vanstone
author2 Maurice Vanstone
Anne Worrall
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description There has not been a specific history of supervising women in the community. This article, therefore, describes the early neglect of work with women and the period of change from the 1970s when women became more visible and the criminal justice system's response to them began to face scrutiny. It posits the story against the background of increased awareness of gender discrimination and efforts to reduce the use of imprisonment by addressing women's criminogenic and social needs through community‐based supervision. It juxtaposes innovative work initiated by practitioners and managers to years of unfulfilled policy promises. An essential part of the story is the attempt to integrate feminist perspectives into policy and practice at a time of organisational and political turbulence. It concludes that our increased understanding of criminalised women presents the opportunity of breaking the frustrating cycle of governmental ‘enthusiasm‐disillusion‐indifference’ and making a genuine contribution to equality and social justice.
published_date 2024-10-22T11:09:29Z
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