17-Page Bibliography of Resources, Specifically Examining Incarcerated

17-Page Bibliography of Resources, Specifically Examining Incarcerated

Aday, Ronald H. and Jennifer J. Krabill. 2011. Women aging in prison: A neglected population in the correctional system. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner. Adler, Frieda. 1975. Sisters in crime: The rise of the new female criminal. New York: McGraw Hill. Ajzenstadt, Mimi. 2009. The Relative Autonomy of Women Offenders’ Decision-Making. Theoretical Criminology 13(2): 201-225. Alarid, L.(2000). Sexual assault and coercion among incarcerated women prisoners: Excerpts from prison letters. The Prison Journal, 80(4), 391-406. Alexander, Michelle. 2012. The new Jim Crow: Mass incarceration in the age of colorblindness. New York: The New Press. Allen, S., Flaherty, C., and Ely, G. (2010). Throwaway moms: Maternal incarceration and the criminalization of female poverty. Affilia 25(2): 160-72. Anderson, Tammy. 2005. Dimensions of Women’s Power in the Illicit Drug Economy. Theoretical Criminology 9(4): 371-400. Anderson, Tammy, ed. Neither Victim Nor Villain: Empowerment and Agency Among Women Substance Abusers. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Arditti, J. & Few, A. (2006). Mothers’ reentry into family life following incarceration. Criminal Justice Policy Review, 17, 103-123. Barbaret, Rosemary. 2014. Women, Crime and Criminal Justice: A Global Enquiry. Routledge: Abingdon. Barry, Ellen M. 1989. “Pregnant Prisoners.” Harvard Women’s Law Journal, no. 12: 189–203. Barrick, Kelle, Pamela Lattimore, & Christy Visher. 2014. Reentering Women: The Impact of Social Ties on Long-Term Recidivism. The Prison Journal 94(3): 279-304. Batchelor, S. (2005). 'Prove me the bam!': Victimization and agency in the lives of young women who commit violent offenses. The Journal of Community and Criminal Justice, 52(4), 358-375. Baunach, Phyllis Jo. 1985. Mothers in Prison. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction. Belknap, J. (2001). The invisible woman: Gender, crime, and justice. Belmont CA: Wadsworth. Bell, K. (2007). Gender and Gangs: A Quantitative Comparison. Crime and Delinquency 55: 363-87 Bergseth, K. J., Jens, K. R., Bergeron-Vigesaa, L., & McDonald, T. D. (2011). Assessing the needs of women recently released from prison. Women & Criminal Justice, 21, 100-122. 1 Bernstein, Nell. 2005. All Alone in the World: Children of the Incarcerated. New York: New Press. Birkett, Gemma. 2014. Penal Reform Discourse for Women Offenders: Campaigners, Policy Strategies and ‘Issue Reframing.’ Crime, Media, Culture 10(2): 115-132. Bloom, B., Owen, B., & Covington, S. (2003). Gender-responsive strategies: Research, practice, and guiding principles for women offenders. Washington D.C.: National Institute of Corrections. Bloom, B., Owen, B., & Covington, S. (2004). Women offenders and the gendered effects of public policy. Review of Policy Research, 21, 31-48. Bloom, B. Gender-Responsive Strategies: Research, Practice, and Guiding Principles for Women Offenders. National Institute of Corrections (Washington, DC). Sponsored by National Institute of Corrections. http://www.nicic.org/pubs/2003/018017.pdf Bogart, John, Sally Stevens, Rebecca Hill and Barbara Estrada. 2005. Criminally Involved Drug-Using Mothers: The Need for System Change. The Prison Journal 85(1): 65-82. Bosworth, M. 2007. Creating the responsible prisoner: Federal admission and orientation packs. Punishment and Society, 9, 67-85. Bosworth, Mary & Jeanne Flavin, eds. 2007. Race, Gender, and Punishment: From Colonialism to the War on Terror. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Bosworth, Mary. 2000. Confining Femininity: A History of Gender, Power and Imprisonment. Theoretical Criminology 4(3): 265-284 Bosworth, Mary. 1999. Engendering resistance: Agency and power in women’s prisons. Brookfield, VT: Ashgate. Bosworth, Mary, and Eamonn Carrabine. 2001. “Reassessing Resistance: Race, Gender and Sexuality in Prison.” Punishment and Society 30(4):501–15 Bosworth, Mary, and Andriani Fili. 2013. “Corrections, Gender-Specific Programming and Offender Re-entry.” In Routledge International Handbook of Crime and Gender Studies, ed. Claire M. Renzetti, Susan L. Miller, and Angela R. Gover, 231–46. New York: Routledge. Bradley, R., & Davino, K. (2002). Women's perceptions of the prison environment: When prison is “the safest place I've ever been." Psychology of Women Quarterly, 26(4), 351-359. Brennan, Tim, Markus Breitenbach, William Dieterich, Emily Salisbury and Patricia van Voorhis. 2012. Women’s Pathways to Serious and Habitual Crime: A Person-Centered Analysis Incorporating Gender Response Factors. Criminal Justice & Behavior 39(11): 1481-1508. Brewer-Smyth, K. (2004b). Women behind bars: Could neurobiological correlates of past physical and sexual assault contribute to criminal behavior? Health Care for Women International, 25, 835-852. 2 Britton, Dana. 2011. The Gender of Crime. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Britton, Dana. 2003. At work in the iron cage: The prison as gendered organization. New York: New York University Press. Britton, Dana. 1997. Gendered organizational logic: Policy and practice in men’s and women’s prisons. Gender & Society 11(6): 796-818. Brown, M., & Bloom, B. (2009). Reentry and renegotiating motherhood: Maternal identity and success on parole. Crime & Delinquency, 55, 313-336 Browne, A., Miller, B., & Maguin, E. (1999). Prevalence and severity of lifetime physical and sexual victimization among incarcerated women. International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 22, 301-322. Bumiller, Kristin. 2014. Bad Jobs and Good Workers: The Hiring of Ex-Prisoners in a Segmented Economy. Theoretical Criminology 19(3): 336-354 Campbell, N. 2000. Using Women: Gender, Drug Policy and Social Justice. New York: Routledge. Caputo, Gail (2008) Out in the storm: Drug-addicted women living as shoplifters and sex workers. Boston: Northeastern University Press. Carbone-Lopez, Kristin, Lee Ann Slocum, and Candace Kruttschnitt. 2016. “Police wouldn’t give you no help:” Female offenders on reporting sexual assault to police. Violence Against Women 22(3): 366- 396. Caputo, Gail. 2014. A Halfway House for Women: Oppression and Resistance. Boston: Northeastern University Press. Caputo, Gail. 2008. Out in the Storm: Drug-Addicted Women Living as Shoplifters and Sex Workers. Boston: Northeastern University Press. Carlen, Pat. 1983. Women’s Imprisonment: A Study in Social Control. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ———. 1990. “Women, Crime, Feminism and Realism.” Social Justice 17(4): 106–23. Carlen, Pat, and Jacqueline Tombs. 2006. “Reconfigurations of Penality: The Ongoing Case of the Women’s Imprisonment and (Re)integration Industries.” Theoretical Criminology 10(3):337–60 Carlen, Pat, and Anne Worrall, eds. 2004. Analysing Women’s Imprisonment. Portland, OR: Willan. Carrabine, Eamonn. 2005. “Prison Riots, Social Order and the Problem of Legitimacy.” British Journal of Criminology 45(6):896–913. 3 Chamberlain, Anastasia. 2015. Embodying Prison Pain: Women’s Experiences of Self-Injury in Prison and the Emotions of Punishment. Theoretical Criminology 20(2): 205-219. Chandler, Cynthia. 2010. “The Gender-Responsive Prison Expansion Movement.” In Interrupted Life: Experiences of Incarcerated Women in the United States, ed. Rickie Solinger, Paula C. Johnson, Martha L. Raimon, Tina Reynolds, and Ruby C. Tapia, 332–37. Berkeley: University of California Press. Cheliotis, Leonidas. 2010. The Ambivalent Consequences of Visibility: Crime and Prisons in the Mass Media. Crime, Media, Culture 6(2): 169-184 Cherukuri, Suvarna. 2008. Women in prison: An insight into captivity and crime. Delhi: Cambridge University Press. Chesney-Lind, Meda, and Katherine Irwin. 2008. Beyond Bad Girls: Gender, Violence, and Hype. New York: Routledge. Chesney-Lind, Meda and Michele Eliason. 2006. From Invisible to Incorrigible: The Demonization of Marginalized Women and Girls. Crime, Media, Culture 2(1): 29-47 Chesney-Lind, Meda. 1986. “Women and Crime:” The Female Offender. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society 12(1): 78-96 Chesney-Lind, M. (1997). The female offender: Girls, women and crime. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Chesney-Lind, M., & Rodriguez, N. (1983). Women under lock and key. Prison Journal, 63, 47-65. Clear, T. (2007). Imprisoning communities: How mass incarceration makes disadvantaged neighborhoods worse. New York: Oxford University Press. Clone, Stephanie and Dana DeHart. 2014. Social Support Networks of Incarcerated Women: Types of Support, Sources of Support, and Implications for Reentry. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation 53(7): 503-521 Cobbina, J. (2010). Reintegration success and failure: Factors impacting reintegration among incarcerated and formerly incarcerated women. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 49, 210-232. Cobbina, J. & Bender, K. (2012). Predicting the future: Incarcerated women’s views of reentry success. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 51, 275-294. Comack, Elizabeth. 1999. Producing Feminist Knowledge: Lessons from Women in Trouble. Theoretical Criminology 3(3): 287-306 Comfort, Megan. 2008. Doing time together: Love and family in the shadow of prison. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 4 Cook, S. L., Smith, S. G., Tusher, C. P., & Raiford, J. (2005). Self-reports of traumatic events in a random sample of incarcerated women. Women & Criminal Justice, 16, 107-126. Covington, S. & Bloom, B.E. (2006) Gender Responsive Treatment and Services in Correctional Settings. Women & Therapy, 29(3/4), 9-33. Craig, Susan C. 2009. “A Historical Review of Mother and Child Programs for Incarcerated Women.” Prison Journal 89 (suppl): 35S–52S Dagan, David & Steven Teles. (2016). Prison break: Why conservatives turned

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