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Title: Navigating the Complexity of Dissertations on Female Sex Offenders

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Female sex offenders represent a relatively understudied area within the realm of criminology and
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One of the primary hurdles faced by researchers is the scarcity of literature on the topic. Unlike male
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In particular, many of us have consistently been sold out and marginalized by larger mainstream
feminist and LGBTQ organizations. Nevertheless, it makes for a sometimes bulky read. - Lacks
personal stories. I certainly expected more from the last part, which was a bit hasty and scattered.
Lots of stuff I already knew and thought about, but brought up some more interesting points. And
not to mention the loss of potential and right of someone to live a violence-free life. Exploring the
problem of sexual violence will allow readers to fully understand both types of harm, especially since
their entire premise is that the solutions to these two problems often are in conflict with each other.
Specifically, solo offenders demonstrated a greater presence of personal vulnerabilities including
mental health and substance abuse difficulties. They tend to take very disturbing lines and stances on
sexual abuse out of pure necessity of needing to align with their own very idealistic conception of
“abolition” as a metaphysical absolute, rather than a dialectical process within the frame work of a
social structure controlled by Imperialist hegemony. It is hoped that this material will facilitate and
encourage lunar effect research for the benefit of all. They cover the ways the punitive state currently
treats sex offenders (their word for people who cause harm) in the US, and how it causes further
harm, both to survivors (as the regime doesn't focus on rehabilitation and restoration for the
survivors) and to the sex offenders, the latter in ways that are dehumanising and terribly violent. Our
authors are willing to see the humanity in the sex offender, but not in the prison guard, and I think
this is a mistake. But it is an ineffective analysis of a global societal structure of violence that exists
as a process within countless other processes of capitalist state violence. However, theory
development to date has largely focused on sexual offending, in general, while the area of recidivism
has been largely neglected. I Download Free PDF View PDF See Full PDF Download PDF Loading
Preview Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet
faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser. Because of this, I saw
a lot of blind spots within the text that I wish weren't there. But, as Leila wrote in her review, the
arguments made felt flimsy and undercooked. While I got some things from this book, I would
NEVER recommend it to anyone and would be anxious to even cite it in a paper based on how
badly it fails survivors, particularly survivors of childhood sexual abuse. 4 likes 1 comment Like
Comment Amanie Johal 238 reviews 2 followers January 23, 2023 3.75 stars Very conflicting
feelings on this one. Findings detail observed differences between male and female offenders on
multiple domains and affirm female sexual offenders to be distinctly different from their male
counterparts. A meta-analysis by Cortoni, Hanson and Coache revealed that about 1.5% of female
sex offenders re-offend sexually. Not all women who kill do so because of mental illness, abuse, or
coercion. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Read instantly on your browser
with Kindle for Web. To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely,
please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser. It might be helpful for readers to already have
some background of this. People naturally wish to work on issues closer to them, and the mothers of
sex offenders who 'hates feminism' understandably would be hard pressed to work with survivors'
advocates, especially if they are carceral feminists who advocates for heaver laws and more state
involvement in private lives. (To be clear, both groups are working with flawed ideologies).
Subsequent chapters feature practitioner-focused essays which examine and evaluate current
assessment strategies, treatment needs, effectiveness, and processes for female sexual offenders. You
can download the paper by clicking the button above. All these acronyms just start blurring into one
indistinct blob after a while and it’s really counter-intuitive for the reader, especially when the
approaches of specific groups are juxtaposed against each other but I can barely remember what
VAWA or FRRC or UCCCA or HRDC or SLRP or NARSOL or RSOL or WAR or ACSOL or
SOSEN or CYRR or COSA is, because I’ve just encountered these names for the first time. See Full
PDF Download PDF See Full PDF Download PDF Related Papers Sexual Abuse: A Journal of
Research and Treatment Women Don't Do Such Things.
We have to talk about sexual violence when we talk about abolition - and these authors set out to
have a brave and challenging conversation. It’s also a book that’s interested in solutions alongside
the problems it presents. From those comments, 170 coded themes were identified, and this
amounted to 3,394 coded incidences. Memoirs often include inaccuracies or elaborate fabrications -
including demonstrably false claims about the author's background and experiences - and yet, until
the suit against Frey, there had never been a lawsuit against a memoirist alleging fraud on this basis.
This book engages with something challenging and has some good stuff throughout, but it’s
significantly overshadowed by the author’s inability to understand the gravity of the issue they are
dealing with and handle it accordingly. I would recommend this book to anyone who is pro-abolition
but struggles with the coming to terms with the fact that that includes rethinking how we deal with
sex offenders. Which is ok when we're discussing interpersonal harm within our radical movements
or organizations. While I got some things from this book, I would NEVER recommend it to anyone
and would be anxious to even cite it in a paper based on how badly it fails survivors, particularly
survivors of childhood sexual abuse. 4 likes 1 comment Like Comment Amanie Johal 238 reviews 2
followers January 23, 2023 3.75 stars Very conflicting feelings on this one. This book in my opinion
is dangerous for anyone who might feel like more of a “beginner” to radical thought or theory.
Female Sexual Offenders: Theory, Assessment and Treatment represents the first book to bring
together the most current research, clinical assessment, and treatment techniques of female sexual
offenders into one accessible volume. In describing how violent and exploitative capitalism is, they
in the same breath make the argument that labor within capitalism is not inherently economically
coercive. Innovative metrics are introduced for measuring the impact of lunar effect publications,
and for assessing the positions of authors and journal editors on the possible existence of a lunar
effect. The only reason for leaving out key details is to win readers over. The kind that celebrates
inaction and dresses it up as action. The Feminist and the Sex Offender lays out the context by
describing two problems: the problem of sexual harm and the problem of how we are dealing with
sexual harm (ie. So, yes, I’d appreciate it if they’d join us, but I don’t see it happening, bringing me
back to the question: who’s the book for. The court found Brady guilty on all three murder charges
and sentenced him to three concurrent life sentences. They cover the ways the punitive state
currently treats sex offenders (their word for people who cause harm) in the US, and how it causes
further harm, both to survivors (as the regime doesn't focus on rehabilitation and restoration for the
survivors) and to the sex offenders, the latter in ways that are dehumanising and terribly violent. To
browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to
upgrade your browser. A latent class analysis shows that three subgroups of women can be
distinguished: once-only offenders (who commit just one sex offence and no other offence),
generalists (who combine sex offending with relatively many serious other, often violent, offences)
and specialists (who commit relatively many sex offences next to some minor offences). And it is
also a good primer on restorative and transformative justice and the failings of the carceral system.
Neoliberalism, the religious belief that the marketplace solves every problem, abandons all
responsibility to those left behind in brutal twenty-first-century capitalism. Maybe that's fine? Maybe
they don't want the average reader. Again, maybe this is by design. (The Internet loves these kinds
of profiles because then they can go on a Google rampage and find some additional things to hate
about the person being profiled), but for those of us really listening, I think we'd love to follow a
couple characters more. - Ending suggestions are vague and theoretical. Their analysis in this case of
white innocence of children that is not granted to Black and Brown children is unequivocally correct.
It seems important that people who have caused sexual harm join and support survivor-centered,
abolitionist feminist movements, knowing that they will benefit from the wins of these movements,
rather than having a separate effort that centers their own experiences that will not necessarily do any
good for survivors. Community Reviews 3.73 301 ratings 58 reviews 5 stars 62 (20%) 4 stars 129
(42%) 3 stars 87 (28%) 2 stars 14 (4%) 1 star 9 (2%) Search review text Filters Displaying 1 - 30 of
58 reviews zara 123 reviews 316 followers January 12, 2021 This is a solid book. Largely due to a
failure of our society to recognize women as offenders, we allow them to avoid detection,
prosecution, and interventions like tracking, registration, or mandated treatment. This book really did
not feel like it was truly grounded in a genuine acknowledgment of the degree of trauma that sexual
harm can cause. This is a shameful misrepresentation of abolitionism, justice, and a careless treatment
of its intersection with sexual violence.
For those of us who already identify as abolitionist feminists, organize with grassroots groups, and
approach our work with an intersectional lens, everything that the authors propose makes perfect
sense. Describes the most recent research data regarding female sexual offenders, covering such
issues as female-perpetrated sexual abuse prevalence and juvenile offenders Includes an assessment
of the risk of recidivism, international treatment initiatives, and a discussion on the use of the
polygraph with female sexual offenders Features practitioner-focused essays which evaluate current
assessment strategies, treatment needs, effectiveness, and processes for female sexual offenders Read
more. This article features an examination of virtually every substantiated child sexual abuse case
reported to child protective services in the United States for 2010. The chapters are short, and it
covers a lot of ground. I love the recommendations the authors make in the end. Understandably,
they spent a lot more time talking about the last two, but I find that they have neglected the first type
of harm, which is extremely important to make this conversation whole. To calculate the overall star
rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Specifically, solo offenders
demonstrated a greater presence of personal vulnerabilities including mental health and substance
abuse difficulties. Conclusion: I still took away many helpful new perspectives despite the
disappointment I felt towards their lack of addressing the problem of sexual harm. Furthermore, the
study aims to explore whether the media present male and female sex offenders differently through a
case study analysis of news articles on two male and two female sex offenders. Thinking beyond
consent means a lot of things- confronting the ambiguous nature of most of our relationships is one,
but another is thinking about harm without automatically thinking about punishment. Community
Reviews 3.73 301 ratings 58 reviews 5 stars 62 (20%) 4 stars 129 (42%) 3 stars 87 (28%) 2 stars 14
(4%) 1 star 9 (2%) Search review text Filters Displaying 1 - 30 of 58 reviews zara 123 reviews 316
followers January 12, 2021 This is a solid book. A latent class analysis shows that three subgroups of
women can be distinguished: once-only offenders (who commit just one sex offence and no other
offence), generalists (who combine sex offending with relatively many serious other, often violent,
offences) and specialists (who commit relatively many sex offences next to some minor offences).
It’s also a book that’s interested in solutions alongside the problems it presents. He suggests that
there is a symbiotic relationship between the media and serial killers. Lots of helpful background
information, community and case examples as well as thoughtful and compassionate rationales with
plenty of room for collaboration and disagreement. 1. Abolish the Sex Offender Registry and Civil
Commitment 2. But to refuse to actually do the boots on the ground help, and then turn that into a
moral victory, is to me the worst kind of overwrought activism. Download Free PDF View PDF
Cinema and the Swastika. Innovative metrics are introduced for measuring the impact of lunar effect
publications, and for assessing the positions of authors and journal editors on the possible existence
of a lunar effect. Surely there must be a better way to more coherently present concrete arguments on
reinstating the rights and protections of people with SO convictions. They provided some insight into
how different advocacy groups come with different goals and often doesn’t take into account the
overarching problem of systemic oppression, and as a result, work often gets nowhere. I would be
deeply afraid of being inaccurately labeled alt-right merely for talking about this issue, so proving at
every turn that you really are a radical, prison-abolitionist feminist who wants to protect people from
sexual violence might be a bit of self protection. It was found that although solo and co-offenders
reported similar developmental experiences and psychological dispositions, differences were found in
environmental niche, offense preceding, and positive factors. They call for us to examine why we
want to put sex offenders through an oppressive, racist regime that more often that not serves to
perpetuate the same underlying ideologies that sexual violence stems from - patriarchal ideals, toxic
masculinity, violence as a way to control, and more. Is it possible to hold harm-doers accountable
without recourse to a criminal justice system that redoubles injuries, fails survivors, and retrenches
the conditions that made such abuse possible. Gannon is Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychology at
the University of Kent, UK, and a Chartered Consultant Forensic Psychologist specialising in sexual
offenders at the Trevor Gibbens Unit, Forensic Psychiatry Services, Kent, UK. Download Free PDF
View PDF See Full PDF Download PDF Loading Preview Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. In
this study, the authors developed a descriptive, offense process model of female sexual offending.
Even less is known about the extent to which female sex offenders’ criminal careers contain sex
offences as well as other offences, i.e. the extent of specialisation in sex offending. You can
download the paper by clicking the button above.

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