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Female Defendants and Criminal Courts in Taiwan: An Observation Study
Authors:Hua-Fu Hsu  Bohsiu Wu
Affiliation:(1) Department and Graduate Institute of Criminology, National Chung-Cheng University, Chia-Yi, Taiwan;(2) Department of Sociology, California State University, Sacramento, Sacramento, CA 95819-6005, USA
Abstract:It has long been contended that the criminal justice system extends the influence of patriarchy in society. Feminist and critical criminologists have produced countless examples of the male domination in the criminal justice system. Critics of law and criminal justice point out that the system treats women the same way as does the mainstream society (MacKinnon 1989, 1991; Smart 1989). Therefore, criminal justice cannot be expected to remedy injustices legally before they are recognized as injustices socially. Sociological studies in crime and delinquency have also neglected gender issues. By employing the qualititaive research approach of field observation, this study focuses on how practitioners in three criminal courts in Southern Taiwan interact with female defendants. The findings point out that the court system was unbending in treating the observed defendants in a condescending manner, and expedited the trial process to pronounce the defendants’ guilt. The study aims to offer explicit and nuanced empirical evidence of how gender complicates courtroom interaction. Evidence from this study also forms the basis for policy recommendations and future reform in the criminal justice system.
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