Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/17877
Record ID: 66fcfb8f-a928-4ed1-bee8-ebf293e9be03
Web resource: https://lra.le.ac.uk/bitstream/2381/36256/1/2015robertsjmphd.pdf
Type: Thesis
Title: 'It was do or die' - how a woman's experience of domestic abuse can influence her involvement in crime : a qualitative investigation of the experiences of community-based female offenders
Authors: Roberts, Joanna Marie
Keywords: Women;Domestic violence;Abuse;Prisoners
Year: 2015
Publisher: Department of Criminology, University of Leicester
Notes:  "Female offenders are far more likely to have experienced domestic abuse than the
general female population. Yet despite wide acknowledgement of a relationship
between domestic abuse and female offending there is a lack of research seeking to
explore how this relationship operates. Therefore the central premise of this research
was to examine ways in which a woman's experience of domestic abuse may influence
her involvement in crime. By focusing upon how women cope with their experiences
of domestic abuse this research explored how women's actions and reactions, in
response to the abuse they experience, affected their offending.
The study was approached from a combined feminist and symbolic interactionist
perspective, drawing upon interviews with 25 community-based female offenders who
had experienced domestic abuse, placing the women's own voices and perspectives at
the very centre of the discourse. A supplementary sample of 15 probation service
practitioners were also interviewed to draw upon their experiences of supervising
female offenders.
The research findings reveal how women's situated, subjective and individualised
experiences within, and responses to, their abusive relationships can directly or
indirectly influence their offending. Consequently, this research demonstrates that
women's criminal offences can occur in a much wider context than has previously
been understood when examining the relationship between domestic abuse and
women's offending. Rather than women offending against, or with, an abuse
perpetrator, or being forced or coerced by an abuse perpetrator to commit crime, this
research illustrates the broader and longitudinal effects of domestic abuse.
Significantly, women's offences occur without their abuser present, after the
relationship has ended, or even years after the abuse has ceased, yet their actions can
still be attributed to their experience of domestic abuse. The findings have significant
implications for criminal justice policy and practice including magistrates' training, completion of pre-sentence reports and sentence compliance."
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/17877
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