Social Exclusion of Incarcerated Women with Cognitive Disabilities

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A01=Julie-Anne Toohey
ABI
Adaptive Skills
Author_Julie-Anne Toohey
Behavioural Research Ethics Committee
Category=JBSF1
Category=JKVP
Category=JMK
Challenging Behaviour
CJS Involvement
Cognitive Disabilities
cognitive disability criminal justice intersection
criminology research
CRPD.
Custodial Officers
Detention Units
disability justice
Disability Related Support
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
External Support Services
FASD
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Flinders University Social
gendered incarceration
HASI
Impulse Control
Incarcerated Women
Indigenous women studies
Intersectional Stigma
prison health services
Prison Practitioners
Prison Psychologist
Prisoner Participants
QLD Corrective Service
qualitative interviews
Substance Misuse
Substance Misuse Disorders
Women's Social Exclusion
Women’s Social Exclusion

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032125763
  • Weight: 410g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Social Exclusion of Incarcerated Women with Cognitive Disabilities explores the lived experience of cognitively disabled women incarcerated in Australia. It draws upon in-depth interviews with Indigenous and non-Indigenous women, as well as interviews conducted with prison practitioners – psychologists, counsellors, and Aboriginal Liaison Officers.

Using a theoretical framework of social exclusion, the book charts the complex intersection between cognitively disabled women and the Criminal Justice System, and how this connection works to foster and maintain a state of social exclusion prior to incarceration, and equally, within the prison setting. The book also provides a practical template for other researchers to use when investigating the aligned fields of the Criminal Justice System and incarceration, women offenders, cognitive disability, and social exclusion. By placing the voices of the incarcerated women with cognitive disabilities ‘front and centre’, a new and innovative approach to social exclusion emerges. The book moves beyond the 'telling of sad stories' to examine the social and political climate that permits disadvantage, inequality, and injustice to flourish.

This book will be of great interest to academics and students in criminology, criminal justice, disability studies, women’s and gender studies, and penology. In exploring theory in a practical way, it will also be of use to those involved in the health sector, community services, disability support agencies, disability advocates, prisoner advocacy, women’s studies and women’s advocacy, and human rights activism.

Julie-Anne Toohey is a lecturer and researcher at the University of Adelaide, South Australia. Key areas of research include the importance of maintaining connections between incarcerated parents and their children, and the lived experiences of incarcerated women with cognitive disabilities. Her research has taken place in a number of prisons throughout Australia, and privileges the voices of incarcerated people. Julie-Anne has taught Criminology at the University of Tasmania, the University of South Australia, and Flinders University, and has been part of research teams associated with the Criminology Research Unit at the University of Tasmania and the Crime and Policy Research Unit at Flinders University. She completed her PhD in Criminology through the University of Adelaide.

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