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Author Rockell, Barbara A.
Title Women street hustlers [electronic resource] : who they are and how they survive / Barbara A. Rockell.
Publisher Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, c2008.
Edition 1st ed.
Description xiii, 221 p. ; 24 cm.
Series APA ebook
Note(s) IT Carlow ebook
Bibliog. Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-206) and index.
Contents Introduction: Understanding the lives of women street hustlers -- A critical review of the research literature -- The Rochester study : a quasi-ethnography of women street hustlers -- Designing the research and analyzing the data -- The women's physical environment, social milieu, and pathways to the street -- Criminal patterns and lifestyles -- Surviving on the outside and the inside -- Discussion, conclusions, and implications.
Summary "Although the number of women in U.S. jails remains low in comparison with the number of men, over the past 10 years their admission rate has soared. It now surpasses the rate of increase for men. Who are these chronic low-level female offenders, and what path leads them to drug involvement, prostitution, and petty larceny--illicit activities best described as "hustling"? Although demographic information on these women is available, it tells us little about who they are as people, how they become repeat offenders, or how they survive on the street. Barbara A. Rockell sheds light on these questions in a fascinating and empathic study of female repeat offenders admitted to a New York state jail. Their varied life trajectories reveal the difficulties of growing up in an unstable environment in which adulthood begins early and survival depends on "street smarts." Despite the women's self-defeating behaviors, many of them reveal a surprising degree of initiative and self-sufficiency. This finding runs counter to previous research in which drug use and criminal activity by women have been viewed as reflecting the perpetrators' victim status and lack of agency. The author argues for seeing these behaviors in a broader social context and suggests avenues for future study as well as more humane and constructive intervention strategies"--Jacket. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).
Note(s) Also issued in print.
Reproduction Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. : American Psychological Association, 2008. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreement. s2008 dcunns.
Subject(s) Female offenders -- New York (State) -- Case studies.
Women prisoners -- New York (State) -- Case studies.
Alt Author American Psychological Association.
ISBN 9781433803338 (print ed.)
143380333X (print ed.)
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