2020
DOI: 10.1017/9781108884242
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Women, Crime and Punishment in Ireland

Abstract: GPB), 2 March 1896 (National Archives of Ireland (hereafter NAI), GPB/Pen/1896/34). Excepting headings, capitalisation and punctuation remains as in the original. 2 Daily state of Mountjoy Female Convict Prison, 3 September 1875 (NAI, Government Prisons Office (hereafter GPO) correspondence, 1875/1523). 5 James Lawson to the undersecretary, 10 October 1879 (NAI, Convict Reference File (hereafter CRF), O-8-1882). Full names are used throughout this book because they are provided in the records, which are open t… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 153 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…96 Some women who committed violent acts had their sentences commutated on the explicit condition that they did not gohome, the decision made for them. 97 In January 1892, Elizabeth Buchanan sought early release, promising to emigrate to her siblings in the U.S. 98 The chairman of the General Prisons Board supported the application on the basis that she 'has been over 10 years in prison, and on the whole well-behaved', 'Her conduct before the commission of the crime was good', 'the jury considered her weak-minded' and 'she is now at an age when she could earn her livelihood'. 99 The implication was, of course, that delaying Elizabeth's release would mean that she might then be too old or infirm to emigrate and thus become entirely dependent on public funds.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…96 Some women who committed violent acts had their sentences commutated on the explicit condition that they did not gohome, the decision made for them. 97 In January 1892, Elizabeth Buchanan sought early release, promising to emigrate to her siblings in the U.S. 98 The chairman of the General Prisons Board supported the application on the basis that she 'has been over 10 years in prison, and on the whole well-behaved', 'Her conduct before the commission of the crime was good', 'the jury considered her weak-minded' and 'she is now at an age when she could earn her livelihood'. 99 The implication was, of course, that delaying Elizabeth's release would mean that she might then be too old or infirm to emigrate and thus become entirely dependent on public funds.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an Irish context, sustained research on the voices of the poor has been led by Virginia Crossman (2017) and Lindsey Earner-Byrne (2015a, 2015b, both of whom have focused on begging letters submitted to Dublin officials. This current chapter, and my previous research (Farrell, 2020), builds on work by Crossman and Earner-Byrne by analysing the female criminal voice. In doing so, it also adds to scholarship on criminal voices outside Ireland (Foyster, 2014;Dodge, 2006, 53-64).…”
Section: Women's Voices In the Irish Pastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The punishment of violent women in Ireland has featured in scholarship on transportation, imprisonment, and execution (including Carey, 2000;Curtin, 2001;Farrell, 2020;Lohan, 1989). Lynsey Black's research on the use of the death penalty in twentieth-century Ireland evaluates the factors that contributed to the execution of women or the commutation of their sentences (2018).…”
Section: Women and Violence In Nineteenth-and Early-twentieth-century...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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