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Summary KRM 320(A) Feminist Critique of Traditional Criminology: Study unit 10 $2.87   Add to cart

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Summary KRM 320(A) Feminist Critique of Traditional Criminology: Study unit 10

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A complete summary of essay 22 (unit 10) explaining feminist critique of traditional criminology. Critical thinking activities completed.

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  • January 18, 2018
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KRM 320(A) UNIT 10: FEMINIST C RITIQUE

Essay 22: Feminist critique of Traditional Criminology

INTRODUCTION
 New surge of feminism engulfed USA, Britain & Europe in 1960s and 1970s
 Most important characteristic of modern feminism was that for the first time research was being
produced by women, for women and about women
 However, there was an earlier surge of feminism
 Called “first-wave feminism”
 Was a period of feminism activity & thought during 19th and 20th century
 It mainly focused on legal issues such as women‟s right to vote
 Ways which new surge differs from earlier surge of feminism
 Mukherjee & Fitzgerald found crime rates in US was U-shaped: higher in 1900s, falling in 1938-1945
(war years) and rising 1950s-1970s
 In 1900s women were fighting for their rights & committed crimes to be heard by violating laws
created by men
 The new surge of feminism (since 1960) however deals with the liberation of women = to be
equal with men in workplace & at home, and equal contribution to sciences

 Although Klein, Millman, Smart and Leonard all had their unique focus, their criticism against traditional
criminology was similar & centred around 2 issues, namely:
 The invisibility of women offenders in Criminology and their at best marginal appearances, if they
were included
 Example of marginalisation of women in Criminology: Researcher Thrasher published earliest book
on gang research in criminology (1927)
 It had a very superficial analysis on girl gangs as his source of info was boys and he wrote
through the eyes of boys
 Marginalisation as women are seen as insignificant to men = they aren‟t even used for their own
research
 Also centred around what theories have been developed for women specifically based on research
that is limited & restricted
 Women in general misrepresented in research = led to creation of stereotypes
 Evidence of this stereotyping is seen in Traditional criminologists‟ theories
 Pollak: argued that women have individual characteristics (like deceptiveness, revengefulness,
greediness & untrustworthiness) and they behave in certain ways because they are women, and
also commit crimes because of sexual motivation = this creates a sexist image of women, not all
are what he stated they are
 Lombroso: stated women who commit crime have enormous wickedness, are predestined to be
criminal from birth & more vicious and dangerous than males = not all female offenders are
wicked but act out of pain
 Thomas: saw females as passive & motionless, stated female prostitutions enter into it because
they wanted to satisfy their needs that expresses loss of family & community organisation

KLEIN
 Published article titled “The Aetiology of Female Crime” (1973) = was misleading title, because she
didn‟t examine the causes/origin of female crime as suggested by article title
 Instead she highlighted the continuity in works of most important traditional authors in Criminology,
namely Lombroso and Ferrero, W.I. Thomas and Otto Pollak

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