References
- Alfred, T. (2005). Wasase: indigenous pathways of action and freedom. Peterborough: Broadview Press.
- Balfour, G. & Comack, E. (eds.). (2014). Criminalizing women: gender and (in)justice in neo-liberal times (2nd ed.). Halifax: Fernwood Publishing.
- Brownmiller, S. (1975). Against our will: men, women and rape. New York: Simon and Schuster.
- Comack, E. (1996). Women in trouble. Halifax: Fernwood.
- Comack, E. (2014). Part II Introduction. In G. Balfour, & E. Comack (eds.), Criminalizing women: gender and (in)justice in neo-liberal times (pp. 48–72). Halifax: Fernwood Publishing.
- De Mesmaecker, V. (2010). Building social support for restorative justice through the media: is taking the victim perspective the most appropriate strategy? Contemporary Justice Review, 13(3), 239–267. doi: 10.1080/10282580.2010.498225
- Dignan, J. (2005). Understanding victims and restorative justice. New York: Open University Press.
- Elliott, E. (2011). Security with care: restorative justice and healthy societies. Black Point: Fernwood Publishing.
- Faith, K. (1993). Unruly women: the politics of confinement and resistance. Vancouver: Press Gang Publishers.
- Gotell, L. (2008). Rethinking affirmative consent in Canadian sexual assault law: Neoliberal sexual subjects and risky women. Akron Law Review, 41(4), 865–898.
- Green, S. (2007). The victims’ movement and restorative justice. In G. Johnstone, & D. Van Ness (eds.), Handbook of restorative justice (pp. 71–191). Cullompton: Willan Publishing.
- Haney, L. (2010). Offending women: power, punishment, and the regulation of desire. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Hannah-Moffat, K. (2005). Criminogenic needs and the transformative risk subject: hybridizations of risk/need in penality. Punishment and Society, 7(1), 29–51. doi: 10.1177/1462474505048132
- Hannah-Moffat, K. (2010). Sacrosanct or flawed: risk, accountability and gender-responsive penal politics. Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 22(2), 193–215.
- Hudson, B. (1998). Restorative justice: the challenge of sexual and racial violence. Journal of Law and Society, 25(2), 237–256. doi: 10.1111/1467-6478.00089
- Hudson, B. (2003). Justice in the risk society. London: Sage Publications.
- Hudson, B. (2006). Beyond white man's justice: race, gender and justice in late modernity. Theoretical Criminology, 10(1), 29–47. doi: 10.1177/1362480606059981
- Johnson, H. (1996). Dangerous domains: violence against women in Canada. Toronto: Nelson Canada.
- Johnson, H., & Rodgers, K. (1993). A statistical overview of women and crime in Canada. In E. Adelber, & C. Currie (eds.), In conflict with the law: women and the Canadian justice system (pp. 95–116). Vancouver: Press Gang Publishers.
- Johnstone, G., & Van Ness, D. (2007). The meaning of restorative justice. In G. Johnstone, & D. Van Ness (eds.), Handbook of restorative justice (pp. 5–23). Cullompton: Willan Publishing.
- Kelly, L., Burton, S., & Regan, L. (1996). Beyond victim or survivor: sexual violence, identity and feminist theory and practice. In L. Adkins & V. Merchant (eds.), Sexualizing the social: power and the organization of sexuality (pp. 77–101). New York: St Martin’s Press.
- Larcombe, W. (2002). The ‘ideal’ victim of successful rape complainants: not what you might expect. Feminist Legal Studies, 10, 131–148. doi: 10.1023/A:1016060424945
- Maidment, M. (2006). Doing time on the outside: deconstructing the benevolent community. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Minaker, J. (2014). Sluts and slags: the censuring of the erring female. In G. Balfour & E. Comack (eds.), Criminalizing women: gender and (in)justice in neo-liberal times (pp. 73–91). Halifax: Fernwood Publishing.
- Native Women’s Association of Canada. (2010). What their stories tell us: research findings from the Sisters In Spirit initiative. Retrieved from http://www.nwac.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/2010_What_Their_Stories_Tell_Us_Research_Findings_SIS_Initiative.pdf
- Nelund, A. (2015). Engendering alternative justice: criminalized women, alternative justice, and neoliberalism (PhD Thesis). University of Manitoba.
- Pavlich, G. (2005). Governing paradoxes of restorative justice. London: Glasshouse Press.
- Pollack, S. (2000). Reconceptualizing women’s agency and empowerment: challenges to self-esteem discourse and women’s lawbreaking. Women & Criminal Justice, 12(1), 75–89. doi: 10.1300/J012v12n01_05
- Pollack, S. (2005). Taming the shrew: regulating prisoners through women-centered mental health programming. Critical Criminology, 13(1), 71–87. doi: 10.1007/s10612-004-6168-5
- Pollack, S. (2007). ‘I’m just not good in relationships’: victimization discourses and the gendered regulation of criminalized woman. Feminist Criminology, 2(2), 158–174. doi: 10.1177/1557085106297521
- Ptacek, J. (ed.). (2010). Restorative justice and violence against women. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Randall, M. (2010). Sexual assault law, credibility, and ‘ideal victims’: consent, resistance, and victim blaming. Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, 22(2), 397–433. doi: 10.3138/cjwl.22.2.397
- Razack, S. (2000). Gendered racial violence and spatialized justice: the murder Pamela George.. Canadian Journal of Law and Society, 15(2), 91–130. doi: 10.1017/S0829320100006384
- Royal Canadian Mounted Police. (2014). Missing and murdered aboriginal women: a national operational overview. Retrieved 31 October 2017, from http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/en/missing-and-murdered-aboriginal-women-national-operational-overview
- Sangster, J. (2001). Regulating girls and women: sexuality, the family and the law. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Schiff, M. (2007). Satisfying the needs and interests of stakeholders. In G. Johnstone, & D. Van Ness (eds.), Handbook of restorative justice (pp. 228–246). Cullompton: Willan Publishing.
- Smart, C. (1995). Law, crime and sexuality: essays in feminism. London: Sage Publications.
- Spry, T. (1995). In the absence of word and body: hegemonic implications of ‘victim’ and ‘survivor’ in women’s narratives of sexual violence. Women and Language, 13(2), 27–32.
- Sudbury, J. (ed.). (2005). Global lockdown: race, gender, and the prison-industrial complex. New York: Routledge.
- Walkate, S. (2007). Imagining the victim of crime. Berkshire: Open University Press.
- Walkate, S. (2008). Changing boundaries of the ‘victim’ in restorative justice: so who is the victim now? In D. Sullivan, & L. Tifft (eds.), Handbook of restorative justice (pp. 273–285). London: Routledge.
- Weedon, C. (1997). Feminist practice and poststructuralist theory. Cambridge: Blackwell Pub.
- Wood, L., & Kroger, R. (2000). Doing discourse analysis: methods for studying action in talk and text. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications.