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Location Call # Volume Status
 E-BOOK      
Author Milne, Emma, author.
Title Criminal justice responses to maternal filicide : judging the failed mother / Emma Milne (Durham University, UK).
OCLC 9781839096228
ISBN 9781839096228 (e-book)
Publisher Bingley, U.K. : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2021.
©2021
Description 1 online resource (264 pages)
LC Subject heading/s Mothers -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- England.
Mothers -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Wales.
Women murderers -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- England.
Women murderers -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Wales.
Filicide -- Law and legislation -- England.
Filicide -- Law and legislation -- Wales.
Infanticide -- Law and legislation -- England.
Infanticide -- Law and legislation -- Wales.
Mothers -- England -- Psychology.
Mothers -- Wales -- Psychology.
Other
Genre heading/s
Electronic books
General note Includes index.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents Chapter 1. The 'problem' of maternal filicide of newborn children -- Chapter 2. Mothers in the courtroom I: suspicious perinatal deaths in context -- Chapter 3. Mothers in the courtroom II: the failure of the 'mother' -- Chapter 4. Mothers in the courtroom III: criminalising the irresponsible mother -- Chapter 5. Mothers in law I: criminalising the 'illegitimate' mother -- Chapter 6. Mothers in law II: foetus first -- Chapter 7. Redressing gendered harm: the role of criminal law and criminal justice.
Summary Analysis of criminal cases reveals that women suspected of killing their newborn children are some of the most vulnerable in our society and that infanticide is not just a historical issue but one that has modern implications. While women are less likely to commit violent crime, maternal infant homicide is an enduring form of offending that needs to be understood in a wider social context. In Criminal Justice Responses to Maternal Filicide, Milne provides a comprehensive analysis of conviction outcomes through court transcripts of 15 criminal cases in England and Wales during 2010 to 2019. Drawing on feminist theories of responsibilisation and 'gendered harm', she critically reflects on the gendered nature of criminal justice's responses to suspected infanticide. This contemporary study makes a novel contribution to the fields of law, criminology and gender studies, arguing that through its inability to recognise the vulnerable position of accused women, and respond accordingly, the application of law reflects wider social judgments of pregnant women and mothers who challenge or fail to fulfil ideals of motherhood.
Source of Description Print version record.
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