1st Edition

Working with Women Offenders in the Community

Edited By Rosemary Sheehan, Gill McIvor, Chris Trotter Copyright 2011
    400 Pages
    by Willan

    426 Pages
    by Willan

    Though many more women offenders are supervised in the community than in custody, much less is known about their needs and effective approaches to their supervision, support and treatment. Whilst there has been recent attention paid to responding to the needs of women in prison, negligible attention has been paid to women exiting prison, or on community based orders, and what is needed to work with them to reduce re-offending or entry into prison.

    Contributions to this book challenge policy-makers and corrections systems to concentrate more on community provision for women offenders and resist popular calls for more punitive responses to all offenders, women included. Contributors come from a wide range of countries including Australia, Canada, UK and USA. They argue that the criminogenic lens applied to women’s offending must be gender-responsive if systems are to be successful at addressing the disadvantage and risk associated with offending behaviour.

    Working With Women Offenders in the Community builds on ideas presented in the editors’ previous book, What Works With Women Offenders (2007), extending the focus particularly on women offenders in the community rather than in prison. This book concentrates on women who have committed criminal offences and who may have been placed on probation or other community based court orders or who have been released from prison on parole. It discusses the work done by professional workers including probation officers, community corrections officers and specialist case managers in areas such as drug treatment, housing, mental health or employment programmes.

    This book will be of interest to professional probation officers, case managers, drug treatment workers and others who work with women offenders. It will also be essential reading for students of criminology, social work, psychology, sociology and other disciplines who have an interest in women offenders.

    Introduction, Rosemary Sheean, Gill, McIvor and Chris Trotter  1. Female offenders in the community: the context of female crime, Briege Nugent and Nancy Louks  2. Policy developments in England and Wales, Carol Hodderman  3. Policy developments in the USA, Maureen Buell, Phyllis Modley and Patricia Van Voorhis  4. Policy developments in Australia, Rosemary Sheehan  5. Coercion and women offenders, Dolores Blackwell  6. Victimisation and governance: gender-responsive discourses and correctional practice, Shoshana Pollack  7. Working with women offenders in the community: a view from England and Wales, Loraine Gelsthorpe  8. Beyond youth justice: working with girls and young women who offend, Gilly Sharpe  9. Breaking the cycle: addressing cultural difference in rehabilitation programs, Dot Goulding  10. Women, drugs and community interventions, Margaret Malloch and Gill McIvor  11. Managing risk in the community: how gender matters, Janet T. Davidson  12. Who cares? Fostering networks and relationships in prison and beyond, Jo Deakin and Jon Spencer  13. Mentoring, Chris Trotter  14. Community mentoring in the United States: an evaluation of the Rhode Island Women's Mentoring Programe, Dawn M. Salgado, Judith B. Fox and Kristen Quinlan  15. Maintaining and restoring family for women prisoners and their children, Rosemary Sarri  16. Connecting to the community: a case study in women's resettlement needs and experiences, Becky Hayes Boober and Erica Hansen King  17. Working with women offenders in the community: what works?, Rosemary Sheehan, Gill McIvor and Chris Trotter

    Biography

    Rosemary Sheehan, Gill McIvor, Chris Trotter