Women in Policing: Feminist Perspectives on Theory and Practice

Author:   Emma Cunningham
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367710699


Pages:   122
Publication Date:   31 May 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Women in Policing: Feminist Perspectives on Theory and Practice


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Full Product Details

Author:   Emma Cunningham
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.158kg
ISBN:  

9780367710699


ISBN 10:   0367710692
Pages:   122
Publication Date:   31 May 2023
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Women in policing – Their sameness and difference 1. Wollstonecraft, the ‘nature of woman’, and women entering the police 2. Re-emerging arguments about the nature of woman, a re-examination of twenty-three policewomen data and a review of policing in Australia 3. Feminist use of Freedom of Information requests (FOI) 4. Conclusions and summary Bibliography Index

Reviews

'This book is a must-read for police practitioners, academics, professional policing students and policing scholars. At a time when gender-responsive policing and security are gaining traction domestically and internationally, Emma Cunningham fills a void within the contemporary literature on women in policing, drawing upon contemporary research and using original data to shed light upon gender inequality, sexism, and misogyny in the everyday lives of female police officers in the UK and beyond. This book will serve as a wake-up call for policymakers, police leaders, and trainers.' Dr Wendy Laverick, Programme Director Professional Policing, Hull University 'This book is a clear-sighted exploration of twenty-first-century policing and its impact on women. Emma Cunningham holds current events and practices up to the light of diverse historical sources, in a call to action that is urgent and constructive. She tackles the myth of women's ""nature"" via Mary Wollstonecraft's pioneering arguments on Justice and human rights, and in doing so delivers a powerful case for an intersectional approach to policing. Cunningham was a long-term supporter of the Wollstonecraft memorial artwork, well before the controversy kicked in. Like that memorial, this book ensures that Wollstonecraft is, in Virgina Woolf's words, ""alive and active [...] even now among the living"". With this feminist critique of police work in Britain and beyond, Cunningham draws on Wollstonecraft's key principles and takes them into action, which is exactly where they belong. I learnt a lot from this book and I am filled with hope that others will learn too.' Bee Rowlatt, journalist, writer and activist. She chaired the Mary on the Green campaign to memorialise Mary Wollstonecraft and is a founding Trustee of the human rights education charity the Wollstonecraft Society


"'This book is a must-read for police practitioners, academics, professional policing students and policing scholars. At a time when gender-responsive policing and security are gaining traction domestically and internationally, Emma Cunningham fills a void within the contemporary literature on women in policing, drawing upon contemporary research and using original data to shed light upon gender inequality, sexism, and misogyny in the everyday lives of female police officers in the UK and beyond. This book will serve as a wake-up call for policymakers, police leaders, and trainers.' Dr Wendy Laverick, Programme Director Professional Policing, Hull University 'This book is a clear-sighted exploration of twenty-first-century policing and its impact on women. Emma Cunningham holds current events and practices up to the light of diverse historical sources, in a call to action that is urgent and constructive. She tackles the myth of women's ""nature"" via Mary Wollstonecraft's pioneering arguments on Justice and human rights, and in doing so delivers a powerful case for an intersectional approach to policing. Cunningham was a long-term supporter of the Wollstonecraft memorial artwork, well before the controversy kicked in. Like that memorial, this book ensures that Wollstonecraft is, in Virgina Woolf's words, ""alive and active [...] even now among the living"". With this feminist critique of police work in Britain and beyond, Cunningham draws on Wollstonecraft's key principles and takes them into action, which is exactly where they belong. I learnt a lot from this book and I am filled with hope that others will learn too.' Bee Rowlatt, journalist, writer and activist. She chaired the Mary on the Green campaign to memorialise Mary Wollstonecraft and is a founding Trustee of the human rights education charity the Wollstonecraft Society"


'This book is a must-read for police practitioners, academics, professional policing students and policing scholars. At a time when gender-responsive policing and security are gaining traction domestically and internationally, Emma Cunningham fills a void within the contemporary literature on women in policing, drawing upon contemporary research and using original data to shed light upon gender inequality, sexism, and misogyny in the everyday lives of female police officers in the UK and beyond. This book will serve as a wake-up call for policymakers, police leaders, and trainers.' Dr Wendy Laverick, Programme Director Professional Policing, Hull University 'This book is a clear-sighted exploration of twenty-first-century policing and its impact on women. Emma Cunningham holds current events and practices up to the light of diverse historical sources, in a call to action that is urgent and constructive. She tackles the myth of women's nature via Mary Wollstonecraft's pioneering arguments on Justice and human rights, and in doing so delivers a powerful case for an intersectional approach to policing. Cunningham was a long-term supporter of the Wollstonecraft memorial artwork, well before the controversy kicked in. Like that memorial, this book ensures that Wollstonecraft is, in Virgina Woolf's words, alive and active [...] even now among the living . With this feminist critique of police work in Britain and beyond, Cunningham draws on Wollstonecraft's key principles and takes them into action, which is exactly where they belong. I learnt a lot from this book and I am filled with hope that others will learn too.' Bee Rowlatt, journalist, writer and activist. She chaired the Mary on the Green campaign to memorialise Mary Wollstonecraft and is a founding Trustee of the human rights education charity the Wollstonecraft Society


Author Information

Emma Cunningham is a senior lecturer in Criminology at the University of East London. She has worked within different departments in higher education for over 20 years and has taught under and post-graduate students across the social sciences as well as local, national, and international police officers. She was also involved in the England–Africa Partnership between staff at the University of Teesside, from the Kigali Institute of Education, the National University of Rwanda, and the Rwandan Police, and was an external examiner there (2007–08). She is interested in Wollstonecraft, feminism, domestic and sexual violence, citizenship, human rights, and women and policing, which inform her research areas.

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