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Articles 1 - 16 of 16

Full-Text Articles in Criminology

'If I Wasn't Suicidal, That'll Drive You To It': Women, Jail And Mental Health, Angela Moe Dec 2010

'If I Wasn't Suicidal, That'll Drive You To It': Women, Jail And Mental Health, Angela Moe

Angela M. Moe

No abstract provided.


Being A New Faculty, Angela Moe, Lisa Murphy Dec 2009

Being A New Faculty, Angela Moe, Lisa Murphy

Angela M. Moe

No abstract provided.


'Like A Prison!': Homeless Women's Narratives Of Surviving Shelter, Angela Moe, Sarah Deward Dec 2009

'Like A Prison!': Homeless Women's Narratives Of Surviving Shelter, Angela Moe, Sarah Deward

Angela M. Moe

Relying on field observation and twenty qualitative interviews with shelter residents, this article examines how the bureaucracy and institutionalization within a homeless shelter fits various tenets of Goffman's (1961) "total institution," particularly with regard to systematic deterioration of personhood and loss of autonomy. Women's experiences as shelter residents are then explored via a typology of survival strategies: submission, adaptation, and resistance. This research contributes to existing literature on gendered poverty by analyzing the nuanced ways in which institutionalization affects and complicates women's efforts to survive homelessness.


A Sheltered Life: Observations On A Domestic Violence Shelter, Angela Moe Dec 2008

A Sheltered Life: Observations On A Domestic Violence Shelter, Angela Moe

Angela M. Moe

No abstract provided.


Exploring The Literature On Relationships Between Gender Roles, Intimate Partner Violence, Occupational Status, And Organizational Benefits, Eileen Kwesiga, Myrtle Bell, Marshall Pattie, Angela Moe Dec 2006

Exploring The Literature On Relationships Between Gender Roles, Intimate Partner Violence, Occupational Status, And Organizational Benefits, Eileen Kwesiga, Myrtle Bell, Marshall Pattie, Angela Moe

Angela M. Moe

Studies of intimate partner violence (IPV) and work have been primarily conducted with women in low-wage low-status (LWLS) positions, as much of this research has focused on poverty, welfare, and homelessness. Although women in LWLS positions represent a large percentage of working women in the United States, it is also important to investigate experiences of women in high-wage high-status (HWHS) positions because a growing number of women are employed within such jobs. We propose gender role theory can be used to explain occurrences of IPV among women in HWHS positions and their utilization of organizational benefits. We suggest those in …


The Domestic Violence Experiences Of Women In Community Corrections, Rachel Bridges Whaley, Angela M. Moe, J. Mark Eddy, Jean Daugherty Dec 2006

The Domestic Violence Experiences Of Women In Community Corrections, Rachel Bridges Whaley, Angela M. Moe, J. Mark Eddy, Jean Daugherty

Angela M. Moe

A variety of studies indicate high rates of domestic violence in the backgrounds of women offenders. We examine and extend this work through a qualitative study of women on probation or parole in a western U.S. county. In-depth interviews were conducted with 14 women who participated in a larger study in which only questionnaire data were collected. Participants completed a brief telephone interview about prior experiences of partner violence and then a face-to-face extensive in-person interview. In the analyses, several notable themes emerged regarding the women's histories of child victimization, partner abuse, substance abuse, coercion into crime, and a lack …


Silenced Voices And Structured Survival: Battered Women's Help-Seeking, Angela M. Moe Dec 2006

Silenced Voices And Structured Survival: Battered Women's Help-Seeking, Angela M. Moe

Angela M. Moe

Despite social and governmental responses to battering, many women continue to feel entrapped in abusive relationships. Using standpoint epistemology, this article examines the various aspects of help seeking, and the social and institutional responses to such efforts, through the narratives of 19 women in a domestic violence shelter. The findings are discussed with reference to Ptacek's social entrapment perspective and Gondolf and Fisher's survivor hypothesis, illustrating the socioeconomic and political context of the control tactics utilized by abusers and the structural impediments to battered women's successful help seeking.


Resistance, Compliance And The Climate Of Violence: Understanding Battered Women's Contacts With Police, Angela Moe Dec 2005

Resistance, Compliance And The Climate Of Violence: Understanding Battered Women's Contacts With Police, Angela Moe

Angela M. Moe

No abstract provided.


Women, Drugs, And Crime, Angela M. Moe Dec 2005

Women, Drugs, And Crime, Angela M. Moe

Angela M. Moe

Throughout feminist criminological scholarship, a concerted effort has been focused on understanding the backgrounds, criminal contexts, and programming needs of criminalized women. It is clear that criminalized women enter the justice system with a host of interconnected experiences and issues, ranging from childhood victimization, sexual assault, and intimate partner abuse, to homelessness, poverty, and illness. While these contribute to the motivations and rationales of women’s criminality, they are often aggravated by drug addiction. In a variety of ways, drug use is interlaced with women’s efforts to survive on a daily basis. This article examines the role drugs play in criminalized …


Criminalized Mothers: The Value And Devaluation Of Parenthood From Behind Bars, Angela M. Moe, Kathleen J. Ferraro Dec 2005

Criminalized Mothers: The Value And Devaluation Of Parenthood From Behind Bars, Angela M. Moe, Kathleen J. Ferraro

Angela M. Moe

With the number of incarcerated women rising in the United States, scholarship and activism has focused more explicitly on the backgrounds, criminal contexts, and programming needs of the imprisoned population. This article focuses on motherhood and relies on qualitative life-history interviews with thirty women in a southwestern detention center. The women's narratives are used to further our understanding of the ways in which motherhood (1) resonates with incarcerated women's self-perceptions, (2) relates to their motivations for crime, and (3) informs therapeutic programming within the carceral environment. In order to address the needs of a critical, yet often ignored, correctional population, …


Blurring The Boundaries: Women's Criminality In The Context Of Abuse, Angela Moe Dec 2003

Blurring The Boundaries: Women's Criminality In The Context Of Abuse, Angela Moe

Angela M. Moe

No abstract provided.


Abject Economics: The Effects Of Battering On Women's Work And Employability, Angela M. Moe, Myrtle P. Bell Dec 2003

Abject Economics: The Effects Of Battering On Women's Work And Employability, Angela M. Moe, Myrtle P. Bell

Angela M. Moe

Research on the effects of battering on women’s lives has focused on poverty, homelessness, and welfare receipt, often centering on women who are uneducated or undereducated. The authors analyze how battering impacts the work and employability of women from various employment levels and backgrounds. Data were obtained through qualitative interviews with 19 residents of a domestic violence shelter, some of whom had obtained substantial education and built solid and lucrative careers prior to being abused. The women described instances in which battering had obstructed their ability to find work, maintain employment, and use their wages to establish greater economic independence …


Women's Stories Of Survival And Resistance, Kathleen Ferraro, Angela Moe Dec 2002

Women's Stories Of Survival And Resistance, Kathleen Ferraro, Angela Moe

Angela M. Moe

No abstract provided.


Mothering, Crime And Incarceration, Kathleen J. Ferraro, Angela M. Moe Dec 2002

Mothering, Crime And Incarceration, Kathleen J. Ferraro, Angela M. Moe

Angela M. Moe

This article examines the relationships between mothering, crime, and incarceration through the narratives of thirty women incarcerated in a southwestern county jail. The responsibilities of child care, combined with the burdens of economic marginality and domestic violence, led some women to choose economic crimes or drug dealing as an alternative to hunger and homelessness. Other women, arrested for drug- or alcohol-related crimes, related their offenses to the psychological pain and despair resulting from loss of custody of their children. Many women were incarcerated for minor probation violations that often related to the conflict between work, child care, and probation requirements. …


Malign Neglect Or Benign Respect: Women's Health Care In A Carceral Setting, Angela M. Moe, Kathleen J. Ferraro Dec 2002

Malign Neglect Or Benign Respect: Women's Health Care In A Carceral Setting, Angela M. Moe, Kathleen J. Ferraro

Angela M. Moe

A central tenet of feminist criminological scholarship is the examination of women's experiences with crime and incarceration through their own narratives. Through semi-structured interviews with thirty jailed women, this article examines carceral conditions through the critical lens of the female inmate. Highlighted in this article is the availability and quality of health care in a detention center in Arizona. The findings indicate a contentious duality, exposing both heinous neglect and benign solicitude in the care delivered to jailed women. This duality is situated within the dismal health care system available to indigent women in the region.


Battered Women In The Restraining Order Process: Observations On A Court Advocacy Program, Angela M. Moe Dec 1999

Battered Women In The Restraining Order Process: Observations On A Court Advocacy Program, Angela M. Moe

Angela M. Moe

Between the months of January and May, 1998, the author spent approximately 150 hours as a legal advocate in a court advocacy program in southeastern Wisconsin that assists battered women obtain restraining orders. This article reports observations of how legal advocates in the program are affecting battered women's lives through their services as well as accounts of battered women's experiences in the court system and responses by court personnel to them. These observations are discussed in relation to existing research and theory on work with battered women and to the social context in which such work occurs.