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Female and Male Prisoners in Queensland 1880–1899

Authors :
van der Heijden, M
Pluskota, M
Muurling, S
Piper, A
Bijleveld, C
Dennison, S
de Bruin, J
van der Heijden, M
Pluskota, M
Muurling, S
Piper, A
Bijleveld, C
Dennison, S
de Bruin, J
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Employing a mixed-method approach to quantitative data from the Queensland Police Gazette and qualitative evidence from newspaper archives and government reviews of women’s gaols, this chapter studies women’s imprisonment in Queensland, Australia, at the end of the nineteenth century. It describes the profiles of men and women committed to prison in Queensland from 1880–1899, and the extent to which men and women recidivated. In spite of a number of methodological caveats, women were more likely to be (chronic) recidivists than men during the late nineteenth century in Queensland. This chapter argues that this can be explained in terms of their different social and economic disadvantages and vulnerabilities, related to their stigmatization, policing and institutionalization.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1289933837
Document Type :
Electronic Resource