'A welcome contribution to the historiography of female criminality, and the influence that gender played in European criminal justice systems. It brings together some of the foremost scholars in the field and provides both depth and breadth. Broader analyses of space and place are complemented by closer examinations of policy and representation.'
Heather Shore - Leeds Beckett University
'This stimulating volume questions common assumptions about the qualities and quantities of female criminality. The astonishing array of female recidivists, women who used the law of pragmatic reasons, urban-dwellers who gained independence but also precarity, and transgressors of feminine norms who ended up in workhouses, lunatic asylums, and refuges are brought to the fore in all their variety and multiple meanings.'
Katherine Crawford - Vanderbilt University, Nashville
‘This volume of collected essays sets out to reexamine the intersections of gender and criminality while challenging dominant assumptions about women’s passivity, innocence, and victimhood … Recommended.’
J. Werner
Source: Choice
‘… most valuable contributions is the bibliography which will no doubt prove an important resource for students and scholars alike. The editors, Manon van der Heijden in particular, have done a very good job situating the debates in terms of modern scholarship on women’s roles in the labour force and society. It is another well-placed and necessary attack on simplistic applications of the ideology of 'separate spheres' as a way to 'explain' women who commit crimes. This is very useful for those studying gender and women.’
Karen A. Macfarlane
Source: H-Soz-Kult
‘… Women’s Criminality in Europe, 1600-1914 adds ably to a growing literature …’
Russ Immarigeon
Source: Rutgers: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
‘Scholars of women and crime, imprisonment and reoffending, newspaper reporting, and the multiple factors that influenced these matters will find much of interest and value.’
Katherine D. Watson
Source: The Journal of Interdisciplinary History