Survivor Criminology
A Radical Act of Hope
Herausgeber: Ackerman, Alissa R.; Mallicoat, Stacy L.; Lamphere, Renee D.; Cook, Kimberly J.; Williams, Jason M.
Survivor Criminology
A Radical Act of Hope
Herausgeber: Ackerman, Alissa R.; Mallicoat, Stacy L.; Lamphere, Renee D.; Cook, Kimberly J.; Williams, Jason M.
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Survivor Criminology explores how oneâ s status as a survivor has informed their journey and commitment to research, teaching, and activism. It provides a both a greater understanding to issues of victimization and gives a voice to those experiences as their foundation for criminological research, advocacy, and policy development.
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Survivor Criminology explores how oneâ s status as a survivor has informed their journey and commitment to research, teaching, and activism. It provides a both a greater understanding to issues of victimization and gives a voice to those experiences as their foundation for criminological research, advocacy, and policy development.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Applied Criminology across the Globe
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
- Seitenzahl: 260
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 536g
- ISBN-13: 9781538151693
- ISBN-10: 1538151693
- Artikelnr.: 64055953
- Applied Criminology across the Globe
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
- Seitenzahl: 260
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 536g
- ISBN-13: 9781538151693
- ISBN-10: 1538151693
- Artikelnr.: 64055953
Edited by Kimberly J. Cook; Jason M. Williams; Reneè D. Lamphere; Stacy L. Mallicoat and Alissa R. Ackerman - Foreword by Elizabeth A. Stanko - Contributions by Alissa R. Ackerman; Babette J. Boyd; Kimberly J. Cook; Steven Green; Reneè D. Lamphere; Stacy
Foreword by Elizabeth A. Stanko
Introduction: A Call for Survivor Criminology by Kimberly J. Cook, Reneè D.
Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 1: Balancing the Dual Roles of Sex Crimes Researcher and Rape
Survivor: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Survivor Scholars by Alexa D.
Sardina and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 2: No More Whispers in Secret: My Journey to Navigating Trauma in
Academia by Reneè D. Lamphere
Chapter 3: I Am Not Supposed to be Here: Surviving Poverty and
Anti-Blackness in Criminology and Academia by Jason M. Williams
Chapter 4: From Battered Woman to Professor: A Personal Reflection by
Kimberly J. Cook
Chapter 5: From East New York to the Ivy Tower: How Structural Violence and
Gang Membership Made Me a Critical Scholar by Jennifer Ortiz
Chapter 6: Navigating Survival: Contemplating Adversity and Resilience in
Academia by Monishia Miller
Chapter 7: Surviving Death by Incarceration: Life Without Parole (LWOP) by
Steven Green
Chapter 8: Growing as an Intersectional Scholar Means Rejecting Misogynoir:
Unlearning as an Act of Survival by Toniqua C. Mikell
Chapter 9: When Did Black Lives Ever Matter by Babette J. Boyd
Chapter 10: Survivor Methodology for Healing and Transformation: A Love
Letter to Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse by Lauren J. Silver
Chapter 11: Survivor Criminology as a Scholar/Activist in the #MeToo
Movement and #MeToo Activism by Meredith G. F. Worthen
Chapter 12: Intersectional Biases in the Rural Courtroom by Stacy Parks
Miller
Chapter 13: From Trauma to Healing: Aboriginal-Led Solutions for
First-Nations Justice Involved Communities in Australia by Carly Stanley
and Keenan Mundine
Conclusion: Survivor Criminology: Looking Forward by Kimberly J. Cook,
Reneè D. Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R.
Ackerman
Introduction: A Call for Survivor Criminology by Kimberly J. Cook, Reneè D.
Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 1: Balancing the Dual Roles of Sex Crimes Researcher and Rape
Survivor: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Survivor Scholars by Alexa D.
Sardina and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 2: No More Whispers in Secret: My Journey to Navigating Trauma in
Academia by Reneè D. Lamphere
Chapter 3: I Am Not Supposed to be Here: Surviving Poverty and
Anti-Blackness in Criminology and Academia by Jason M. Williams
Chapter 4: From Battered Woman to Professor: A Personal Reflection by
Kimberly J. Cook
Chapter 5: From East New York to the Ivy Tower: How Structural Violence and
Gang Membership Made Me a Critical Scholar by Jennifer Ortiz
Chapter 6: Navigating Survival: Contemplating Adversity and Resilience in
Academia by Monishia Miller
Chapter 7: Surviving Death by Incarceration: Life Without Parole (LWOP) by
Steven Green
Chapter 8: Growing as an Intersectional Scholar Means Rejecting Misogynoir:
Unlearning as an Act of Survival by Toniqua C. Mikell
Chapter 9: When Did Black Lives Ever Matter by Babette J. Boyd
Chapter 10: Survivor Methodology for Healing and Transformation: A Love
Letter to Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse by Lauren J. Silver
Chapter 11: Survivor Criminology as a Scholar/Activist in the #MeToo
Movement and #MeToo Activism by Meredith G. F. Worthen
Chapter 12: Intersectional Biases in the Rural Courtroom by Stacy Parks
Miller
Chapter 13: From Trauma to Healing: Aboriginal-Led Solutions for
First-Nations Justice Involved Communities in Australia by Carly Stanley
and Keenan Mundine
Conclusion: Survivor Criminology: Looking Forward by Kimberly J. Cook,
Reneè D. Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R.
Ackerman
Foreword by Elizabeth A. Stanko
Introduction: A Call for Survivor Criminology by Kimberly J. Cook, Reneè D.
Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 1: Balancing the Dual Roles of Sex Crimes Researcher and Rape
Survivor: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Survivor Scholars by Alexa D.
Sardina and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 2: No More Whispers in Secret: My Journey to Navigating Trauma in
Academia by Reneè D. Lamphere
Chapter 3: I Am Not Supposed to be Here: Surviving Poverty and
Anti-Blackness in Criminology and Academia by Jason M. Williams
Chapter 4: From Battered Woman to Professor: A Personal Reflection by
Kimberly J. Cook
Chapter 5: From East New York to the Ivy Tower: How Structural Violence and
Gang Membership Made Me a Critical Scholar by Jennifer Ortiz
Chapter 6: Navigating Survival: Contemplating Adversity and Resilience in
Academia by Monishia Miller
Chapter 7: Surviving Death by Incarceration: Life Without Parole (LWOP) by
Steven Green
Chapter 8: Growing as an Intersectional Scholar Means Rejecting Misogynoir:
Unlearning as an Act of Survival by Toniqua C. Mikell
Chapter 9: When Did Black Lives Ever Matter by Babette J. Boyd
Chapter 10: Survivor Methodology for Healing and Transformation: A Love
Letter to Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse by Lauren J. Silver
Chapter 11: Survivor Criminology as a Scholar/Activist in the #MeToo
Movement and #MeToo Activism by Meredith G. F. Worthen
Chapter 12: Intersectional Biases in the Rural Courtroom by Stacy Parks
Miller
Chapter 13: From Trauma to Healing: Aboriginal-Led Solutions for
First-Nations Justice Involved Communities in Australia by Carly Stanley
and Keenan Mundine
Conclusion: Survivor Criminology: Looking Forward by Kimberly J. Cook,
Reneè D. Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R.
Ackerman
Introduction: A Call for Survivor Criminology by Kimberly J. Cook, Reneè D.
Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 1: Balancing the Dual Roles of Sex Crimes Researcher and Rape
Survivor: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Survivor Scholars by Alexa D.
Sardina and Alissa R. Ackerman
Chapter 2: No More Whispers in Secret: My Journey to Navigating Trauma in
Academia by Reneè D. Lamphere
Chapter 3: I Am Not Supposed to be Here: Surviving Poverty and
Anti-Blackness in Criminology and Academia by Jason M. Williams
Chapter 4: From Battered Woman to Professor: A Personal Reflection by
Kimberly J. Cook
Chapter 5: From East New York to the Ivy Tower: How Structural Violence and
Gang Membership Made Me a Critical Scholar by Jennifer Ortiz
Chapter 6: Navigating Survival: Contemplating Adversity and Resilience in
Academia by Monishia Miller
Chapter 7: Surviving Death by Incarceration: Life Without Parole (LWOP) by
Steven Green
Chapter 8: Growing as an Intersectional Scholar Means Rejecting Misogynoir:
Unlearning as an Act of Survival by Toniqua C. Mikell
Chapter 9: When Did Black Lives Ever Matter by Babette J. Boyd
Chapter 10: Survivor Methodology for Healing and Transformation: A Love
Letter to Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse by Lauren J. Silver
Chapter 11: Survivor Criminology as a Scholar/Activist in the #MeToo
Movement and #MeToo Activism by Meredith G. F. Worthen
Chapter 12: Intersectional Biases in the Rural Courtroom by Stacy Parks
Miller
Chapter 13: From Trauma to Healing: Aboriginal-Led Solutions for
First-Nations Justice Involved Communities in Australia by Carly Stanley
and Keenan Mundine
Conclusion: Survivor Criminology: Looking Forward by Kimberly J. Cook,
Reneè D. Lamphere, Jason M. Williams, Stacy L. Mallicoat, and Alissa R.
Ackerman