Feminized Justice: The Toronto Women’s Court, 1913-34
Amanda Glasbeek
In 1913, Toronto launched an experiment in feminist ideals: a woman’s police court. The court offered a separate venue to hear cases that involved women and became a forum where criminalized women – prostitutes, vagrants, alcoholics, and thieves – met and struggled with the meaning of justice.
This multifaceted portrait of the court’s business and its people – from its inception by middle-class, maternal feminists to its demise in 1934, from the repeat offender to its controversial magistrate, Margaret Patterson – reveals the experiment’s fundamental contradiction. The court was both a site for feminist adaptations of justice and a court empowered ... Read more
Feminized Justice sheds new light on maternal feminist politics, women and crime, and the role of resistance, agency, and experience in the justice system.
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About Amanda Glasbeek
Reviews for Feminized Justice: The Toronto Women’s Court, 1913-34
Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
Law and Politics Book Review, Vol 20, No 7