Women Prisoners: A Forgotten Population
By (Author) Beverly R. Fletcher
By (author) Dreama Moon
By (author) Lynda D. Shaver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th July 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Rehabilitation of offenders
Gender studies: women and girls
364.3
Hardback
212
From the Foreword by George Henderson: Perhaps nothing captures the debilitating effects of sexism more vividly than [this] in-depth study of women incarcerated in our correctional institutions. Beneath the statistics lie a human tragedy of a magnitude most people cannot fully comprehend. A disproportionate number of women are wasting away in non-rehabilitative institutions that perpetuate rather than correct criminal behaviors. The editors and contributors to this book capture cogent slices of life of some of the role players in the prison drama. And they do so with the sensitive touch of social surgeons who carefully lift and examine one layer of human behavior and then another. But they do not stop there. They also examine some of the attitudes, beliefs, and values of incarcerated women and their keepers (prison staff). The total work is an insightful glimpse of a neglected subculture. One of the unique features of the book is the diversity of the contributors in terms of disciplines such as sociology, psychology, anthropology, social work, communication, and organization and management. Another feature that makes this work different is the multi-ethnic and cross-cultural diversity of the contributors. Finally, there are no other studies that look at women offenders holistically.
this volume clearly advances general knowledge in this critical area...raise serious questions regaurding the suitability and effectiveness of current prision programming for women offenders....the study provides much insight on organizational conflict within the prison...This book is a commendable effort.It will be of interest to criminologists, to students of corrections, and to those corrections practitioners who are looking for new answers to the very vexing and persistant promblems in the management of women's prisons...I find the book's radical approach to explaining and treating female criminality refreshing, to say the least....The book contains many suggestions for further research, presents a number of theoretical formulas for testing, and, mosy importantly, provides a wealth of emphirical data inviting additional analysis.-Criminal Justice Review
This book illuminates these women's lives and is a valuable asset to professionals who wish to learn more about people who are not usually present in our social science scholarship.-Contemporary Psychology
"This book illuminates these women's lives and is a valuable asset to professionals who wish to learn more about people who are not usually present in our social science scholarship."-Contemporary Psychology
"this volume clearly advances general knowledge in this critical area...raise serious questions regaurding the suitability and effectiveness of current prision programming for women offenders....the study provides much insight on organizational conflict within the prison...This book is a commendable effort.It will be of interest to criminologists, to students of corrections, and to those corrections practitioners who are looking for new answers to the very vexing and persistant promblems in the management of women's prisons...I find the book's radical approach to explaining and treating female criminality refreshing, to say the least....The book contains many suggestions for further research, presents a number of theoretical formulas for testing, and, mosy importantly, provides a wealth of emphirical data inviting additional analysis."-Criminal Justice Review
BEVERLY R. FLETCHER is Assistant Professor of Human Relations at the University of Oklahoma and the author of Organization Transformation Theorists and Practitioners (Praeger, 1990). LYNDA DIXON SHAVER is an Assistant Professor in Speech Communication at Indiana University at South Bend. Her work has included Native American women's health issues and organizational consulting and training. DREAMA G. MOON is a doctoral student in the department of Communication at Arizona State University. She is co-founder of the Project for Recidivism Research and Female Inmate Training and serves as co-principal investigator of the project.