The Career Girl Murders: Gender, Race, and Crime in 1960s New York
Working with female offenders and victims of all races, feminist criminologists found that women of color were particularly at risk for violence and sometimes committed crimes in self-defense. [...] they revealed that most rapes and murders were - and are - committed by victims and perpetrators of t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Women's studies quarterly 2011-04, Vol.39 (1/2), p.244-261 |
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description | Working with female offenders and victims of all races, feminist criminologists found that women of color were particularly at risk for violence and sometimes committed crimes in self-defense. [...] they revealed that most rapes and murders were - and are - committed by victims and perpetrators of the same racial background, many of whom knew each other prior to the attack. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1353/wsq.2011.0006 |
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source | Jstor Complete Legacy; Education Source; Sociological Abstracts |
subjects | African Americans Careers Cities Civil Rights Crime Fear of crime Females Feminism Grass roots movement Homicide Housing Liberalism Murder Neighborhoods Police Political advertising Political Attitudes PUBLIC/COMMUNITY Race Rape Rhetoric Security Sex Social Status Street crime Violence against women Violent crime Violent crimes White people Whites Women Working women |
title | The Career Girl Murders: Gender, Race, and Crime in 1960s New York |
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