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New Directions in Feminist Understandings of Rural Crime

NCJ Number
249414
Journal
Journal of Rural Studies Volume: 39 Dated: June 2015 Pages: 180-187
Author(s)
Walter S. DeKeseredy
Date Published
June 2015
Length
8 pages
Annotation
This article's main objective is twofold: (1) to briefly review the extant feminist literature on rural crimes and societal reactions to them and (2) to suggest new directions in the development of a feminist rural criminology.
Abstract
In the early to mid-1990s, Patricia Gagne's work on woman abuse in the Appalachian region of the United States (U.S) sparked contemporary feminist interpretations of rural crime and social control. Nevertheless, the flames did not emerge until the latter part of the last decade, with the publication of a spate of scholarly books, journal articles, and chapters. These feminist contributions enhance an empirical and theoretical understanding of rural criminality and societal reactions to it, but there are still key gaps in gender and rural crime research. (Publisher abstract modified)