
@article{ref1,
title="Female Perpetrated Homicide in Victoria Between 1985 and 1995",
journal="Australian and New Zealand journal of criminology",
year="2003",
author="Kirkwood, Deborah",
volume="36",
number="2",
pages="152-172",
abstract="This article presents findings of research on women who kill. All cases in which a woman was investigated by police as a perpetrator in a homicide in Victoria,Australia,between 1985 and 1995 were examined.The aim was to investigate the range of circumstances in which women kill. Seventy-seven cases were identified.The primary source of data was the Victorian Coroner 's office.Initially it was expected that most women would have killed a partner as a result of the experience of long-term violence. However,the findings of the study show that the situation with respect to women and those they kill is more complex.Three primary relationship categories were identified:women who kill their partners,women who kill their children and women who kill non-intimates.The third category primar- ily involved women who killed friends and acquaintances.This paper will argue that the homicide literature fails to provide a conceptual framework for understanding women who kill and hence contributes to the cultural stigmatising of violent women as “mad” or “bad”.<p />",
language="",
issn="0004-8658",
doi="10.1375/acri.36.2.152",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1375/acri.36.2.152"
}