Este módulo es un recurso para los catedráticos 

 

Lecturas avanzadas

 

The following readings are recommended for students interested in exploring the topics of this Module in more detail, and for lecturers teaching the Module: 

Gender and drug trafficking

  • Bourgois, Philippe (1996). "In search of masculinity: violence, respect and sexuality among Puerto Rican crack dealers in East Harlem." The British Journal of Criminology 36, no. 3: 412-427.
  • Bourgois, Philippe (2003). In search of respect: Selling crack in El Barrio. Cambridge University Press: New York.
  • Carey, Elaine (2014). Women drug traffickers: mules, bosses and organized crime. University of New Mexico Press: Santa Fe.
  • Cruz, Luis Felipe and Margarita Martinez Osorio (2018). The Place that female coca growers deserve. DeJusticia. 14 March 2018
  • Estévez, Ariadna (2017). "La violencia contra las mujeres y la crisis de derechos humanos: de la narcoguerra a las guerras necropolíticas."  Revista interdisciplinaria de estudios de género de El Colegio de México 3, no. 6: 69-100
  • Fleetwood, Jennifer (2014). Drug mules: women in the international cocaine trade. Palgrave MacMillan: London.
  • Equis Justicia para las Mujeres (2018). Politicas de drogas, género y encarcelamiento en Mexico: una guía para políticas públicas incluyentes. Mexico City: Mexico, 2018.
  • Guerra, Santiago Ivan (2015). "La Chota y Los Mafiosos: Mexican American casualties of the border drug war."  Latino Studies 13, no. 2: 227-244.
  • Hübschle, Annette (2014). "Of bogus hunters, queenpins and mules: the varied roles of women in transnational organized crime in Southern Africa."  Trends in organized crime 17, no. 1-2: 31-51.
  • Muehlmann, Shaylih (2018). "The Gender of the War on Drugs."  Annual Review of Anthropology.Vol. 47:315-330.
  • Núñez Noriega, Guillermo, and Claudia Esthela Espinoza Cid (2017). "El narcotráfico como dispositivo de poder sexo-genérico: crimen organizado, masculinidad y teoría queer."  Revista interdisciplinaria de estudios de género de El Colegio de México 3, no. 5: 90-128.
  • Padovani, Natália Corazza (2016). "Plotting prisons, flows and affections: Brazilian female prisoners between the transnational drug trade and sex markets in Barcelona."  Criminology & Criminal Justice 16, no. 3: 366-385.
  • Padovani, Natália Corazza (2017). "Trafficking Of Women In Prisons Entrances Or Security And Gender Devices In The Production Of "Dangerous Classes."  Cadernos Pagu 51  (en portugués).
  • Urquiza‐Haas, Nayeli (2017). "Vulnerability Discourses and Drug Mule Work: Legal Approaches in Sentencing and Non‐Prosecution/Non‐Punishment Norms."  The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice 56, no. 3: 309-325.
  • Van San, Marion, and Elga Sikkens (2017). "Families, Lovers, and Friends: Women, Social Networks, and Transnational Cocaine Smuggling from Curaçao and Peru." The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice 56, no. 3: 343-357.
  • Washington Office for Latin America (WOLA) (2017). The Stories of Women in Prison for Drug Related Crimes. Video Series. Washington DC.
  • Washington Office for Latin America (WOLA), IDPC, DeJusticia, CIM, Organizacion de Estados Americanos (2013). Women, Drug Policies and Incarceration: A guide for Policy reform in Latin America and the Caribbean. WOLA: Washington DC.
  • Zaitch, Damián (2002). Trafficking cocaine: Colombian drug entrepreneurs in the Netherlands. Vol. 1. Springer Science and Business Media.
 

El rol de las mujeres en la delincuencia (organizada)

  • Ali, Badr‐el‐Din (1997). "Female criminality in modern Egypt: A general outlook."  International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 21, no. 2: 267-285.
  • Arsovska, Jana and Felia Allum (2014), eds. "Special Issue: Women and Transnational Organized Crime." Trends in Organized Crime. Vol. 17, 1-2.
  • Arsovska, Jana, and Popy Begum (2014). "From West Africa to the Balkans: exploring women's roles in transnational organized crime."  Trends in organized crime 17, no. 1-2: 89-109.
  • Fiandaca, Giovanni ed. (2007). Women and the mafia: Female roles in organized crime structures. Vol. 5. Springer Science & Business Media.
  • Kleemans, Edward R., Edwin W. Kruisbergen, and Ruud F. Kouwenberg (2014). "Women, brokerage and transnational organized crime. Empirical results from the Dutch Organized Crime Monitor." Trends in organized crime 17, no. 1-2: 16-30.
  • Lima Malvido María de la Luz (2004). Criminalidad Femenina. Teorías y reacción social. Editorial Porrúa: 2004. 
  • Pizzini-Gambetta, Valeria (2014). "Organized crime: the gender constraints of illegal markets."  The Oxford handbook of gender, sex, and crime: 448-467.
  • Shen, Anqi (2016). "Female Membership in the Black-Society Style Criminal Organizations: Evidence From a Female Prison in China." Feminist Criminology 11, no. 1: 69-90.
  • Shen, Anqi, and Simon Winlow (2014). "Women and crime in contemporary China: A review essay." International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 38, no. 4: 327-342.
  • Siegel, Dina (2014). "Women in transnational organized crime."  Trends in organized crime 17, no. 1-2: 52-65.
  • Zhang, Sheldon X., and Ko-lin Chin (2008). "Snakeheads, mules, and protective umbrellas: A review of current research on Chinese organized crime." Crime, Law and Social Change 50, no. 3: 177-195.
 

Las mujeres y la trata de personas

  • Agustin, Laura (2007). Sex in the Margins: migration, labour markets and the rescue industry.  London: Zed Books.
  • Brennan, Denise (2014). Life Interrupted: trafficking and forced labor in the United States. Duke University Press.
  • Cabezas, Amalia L. (2016). Invisible Dominican Women: Discourses of Trafficking into Puerto Rico. Cadernos pagu, 47.
  • Kempadoo, Kamala (2012). Trafficking and Prostitution Reconsidered: New perspectives on migration, sex work and human rights. 2 nd edition. London: Routledge.
  • Piscitelli, Adriana (2016). Economias sexuais, amor e tráfico de pessoas-novas questões conceituais. Cadernos pagu 47: 132-162.
  • Plambech, Sine and Denisse Brennan (2018). "Life after trafficking". Special Issue, Anti-Trafficking Review Journal, vol. 10.
  • Rosseau, David (2018). "From passive victims to partners in their own integration: civil society's role in empowering returned Thai fishermen". Anti-Trafficking Review, vol. 10, (88-104). 
  • Seagrave, Marie, Sonja Milivojevic and Sharon Pickering (2012). Sex trafficking: international context and response. Willan, London.
  • Surtees, Rebecca (2018). "At home: family reintegration of trafficked Indonesian men". Anti-Trafficking Review Journal, 10: 70-87, 2018. 
 

Las mujeres y el tráfico de migrantes

  • Brigden, Noelle K (2018). "Gender mobility: survival plays and performing Central American migration in passage."  Mobilities 13, no. 1: 111-125.
  • Mainwaring, Ċetta, and Noelle Brigden, eds (2016). "Beyond the border: Clandestine migration journeys." Special Issue of Geopolitics: 243-262.
  • Sanchez, Gabriella (2016). "Women's Participation in the Facilitation of Human Smuggling: The Case of the US Southwest."  Geopolitics21(2), pp.387-406.
  • Vogt, Wendy (2016). "Stuck in the middle with you: The intimate labours of mobility and smuggling along Mexico's migrant route."  Geopolitics 21, no. 2: 366-386.
  • Zhang, Sheldon X., Ko‐Lin Chin, and Jody Miller (20107. "Women's participation in Chinese transnational human smuggling: a gendered market perspective." Criminology 45, no. 3: 699-733.
 

El impacto de la criminalización sobre la raza, el género y la clase

  • Agboola, Caroline (2017). "'Why do they need to punish you more?': women's lives after imprisonment. South African Review of Sociology 48, no. 2: 32-48.
  • Bermudez, Natalia (2016). " 'Algo habrán hecho': un análisis sobre las contiendas morales en el acceso a la condición de activista familiar en casos de muertes violentas" (Córdova, Argentina). Antipoda, Revista de Antropologia y Arqueologia 25, 59-73.
  • Chavez Villegas, C. (2018). Youth and Organized Crime in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico: An exploration of contributing factors (Doctoral thesis). Cambridge University: Cambridge.
  • Khalid, Adeela, and Nashi Khan (2013). "Pathways of women prisoners to jail in Pakistan."  Health promotion perspectives 3, no. 1: 31.
  • Maghsoudi, Aliasghar, Nahid Rahimipour Anaraki, and Dariush Boostani (2018). "Patriarchy as a contextual and gendered pathway to crime: a qualitative study of Iranian women offenders."  Quality & Quantity 52, no. 1 (2018): 355-370.
  • Mairaj, Saira, Rubina Munir; Sajjad Hussain, Sajjad, Muhhamad Khan (2017). Female Probationers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Pakistan. Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Vol. 9 Issue 2, p. 1-14.
  • Meneses, Rodrigo, and Gustavo Fondevila (2014). "Mapping the Killer State: Gender, Space, and Deaths Due to Legal Intervention in Mexico (2004-2010)."  Women & Criminal Justice 24, no. 4: 306-323.
  • Menjívar, Cecilia, and Shannon Drysdale Walsh (2017). "The architecture of femicide: the state, inequalities, and everyday gender violence in Honduras." Latin American research review 52, no. 2.
  • Naqvi, Razia Hussain (2015). "Situational Analysis of Female Offenders in Jails: A Case Study of Central Jails of Dera Ismail Khan, Haripur & Peshawar."  Pakistan Journal of Criminology Volume 7, no. 3: 12-21.
  • Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito (UNODC) (2007). Afghanistan: Female Prisoners and their Social Reintegration. UNODC: Vienna.
  • Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito (UNODC) (2011). Reglas de las Naciones Unidas para el tratamiento de las reclusas y medidas no privativas de la libertad para las mujeres delincuentes y sus Comentarios. UNODC: Vienna.
  • Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito (UNODC) (2014). Handbook on Women and Imprisonment. UNODC: Vienna.
  • Sadeghi-Fassaei, Soheila, and Kathleen Kendall (2001). "Iranian women's pathways to imprisonment." Women's Studies International Forum, vol. 24, no. 6, pp. 701-710. Pergamon.
  • Small Arms Survey (2016). A gendered analysis of violent deaths. Small Arms Survey: Geneva. 
  • UNLIREC (2015). Violencia armada, violencia por motivos de género y armas pequeñas: sistematización de datos disponibles en América Latina y el Caribe. Centro de las Naciones Unidas Regional para la paz, el desarme y el desarrollo en América Latina y el Caribe:  La Paz.
  • Veloso, Diana Therese M. (2016). "Of Culpability and Blamelessness: The Narratives of Women Formerly on Death Row in the Philippines."  Asia-Pacific Social Science Review 16, no. 1: 1-1.
 

Masculinidades

  • Deuchar, Ross (2018). "Gang Members 'Doing Masculinity'." Gangs and Spirituality (pp. 19-37). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.
  • Ganapathy, Narayanan, and Lavanya Balachandran (2018). " 'Racialized masculinities': A gendered response to marginalization among Malay boys in Singapore." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology.
  • Henry, Robert (2015). "Social Spaces of Maleness: the role of street gangs in practising indigenous masculinities." in: Innes, Robert Alexander and Kim Anderson, eds. Indigenous Men and Masculinities: Legacies, Identities, Regeneration. University of Manitoba Press.
  • Innes, Robert Alexander and Kim Anderson, ed (2015). Indigenous Men and Masculinities: Legacies, Identities, Regeneration. University of Manitoba Press.
  • Piche, Allison (2015). "Imprisonment and Indigenous masculinity: contesting hegemonic masculinity in a toxic environment." in: Innes, Robert Alexander and Kim Anderson, ed. Indigenous Men and Masculinities: Legacies, Identities, Regeneration. University of Manitoba Press.
 

Mujeres indígenas

  • Hernández, Aida R (2013). "Del estado multicultural al estado penal: mujeres indígenas presas y criminalización de la pobreza." in: Sierra, María Teresa, Rosalva Aída Hernández and Rachel Sieder (eds.). Justicias Indígenas y Estado: Violencias Contemporáneas. FLACSO México: Mexico City. p. 299-338.
  • McIntosh, Tracey and Stan Coster (2017). "Indigenous insider knowledge and prison identity." Counterfutures: Aotearoa/New Zealand.
  • Native Women's Association of Canada (NWCA) (2015). "Why are so many First Nations, Inuit and Métis women and girls criminalized?" Youth Focus Part 2. NWCA: Ottawa.
  • Nine to Noon (2015). "Why more New Zealand women, particularly Maori are being jailed." Interview with Tracey McIntosh,  Radio New Zealand. 23 April 2015.
  • Ojeda Dávila, Lorena (2015). "Cheran: el poder del consenso y las luchas comunitarias." Política Común. Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo, Vol. 7. 2015.
  • Ortega, Rosalba Robles (2015). "Hidden Gender Violence in the War on Organized Crime in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico (2010-2011)."  Journal: Journal of Advances in Humanities 4, no. 1.
  • Park, Min Jee Yamada, and Samantha Jeffries (2018). "Prisoners of identity: The experiences of ethnic minority Vietnamese women categorised as foreign in Cambodian prisons." Women's Studies International Forum, vol. 69, pp. 56-66. Pergamon.
  • Sierra, María Teresa, Rosalva Aída Hernández and Rachel Sieder (eds.) (2013). Justicias Indígenas y Estado: Violencias Contemporáneas. FLACSO Mexico: Mexico City.
 

Pandillas

 

Criminología verde

  • McElwee, Pamela (2012). "The Gender Dimensions of the Illegal Trade in Wildlife." Gender and Sustainability: Lessons from Asia and Latin America. University of Arizona Press: Tucson: 71.
  • Sollund, Ragnhild (2017). "Doing green, critical criminology with an auto-ethnographic, feminist approach." Critical Criminology 25, no. 2: 245-260.
  • Sollund, Ragnhild (2017). "The use and abuse of animals in wildlife trafficking in Colombia: Practices and injustice." Environmental Crime in Latin America, pp. 215-243. Palgrave Macmillan, London.

 

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