Looking back, looking forward: the promise of feminist transformation
Pp. 443-57 in Barbara R. Price and Natalie J. Sokoloff (eds.) The Criminal Justice System and Women (2nd edition). New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc.
Gender and sentencing: what we know and don’t know from empirical research
Federal Sentencing Reporter 8(3), 163-68.
Criminal law and justice system practices as racist, white, and racialized
Washington and Lee Law Review 51, 431-64.
Men’s violence, victim advocacy, and feminist redress
Comment on Stuart Scheingold et al., “Sexual violence, victim advocacy, and republican criminology: Washington State’s Community Protection Act.” Law and Society Review 28(4), 777-86.
Masculinities, violence, and communitarian control
Pp. 189-213 in Tim Newburn and Elizabeth A. Stanko (eds.) Just Boys Doing Business? Men, Masculinities and Crime. London: Routledge.
Gender and punishment disparity
Pp. 117-33 in Martha Myers and George Bridges (eds.) Inequality, Crime, and Social Control. Boulder: Westview Press.
Celebrated crime cases and the public’s imagination: from bad press to bad policy?
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, special supp. issue, 6-30.
Field research: a complement for service-learning
Pp. 85-95 in Jeffrey Howard (ed.) Praxis I: A Faculty Casebook on Community Service Learning. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Office of Community Service Learning Press.
Women’s pathways to felony court: feminist theories of lawbreaking and problems of representation
Southern California Review of Law and Women’s Studies 2(1), 11-52.
Do restraining orders help? Battered women’s experience with male violence and legal process
Pp. 227-52 in Eve S. Buzawa and Carl G. Buzawa (eds.) Domestic Violence: The Changing Criminal Justice Response. Westport CT: Auburn House.
Proceedings of the International Feminist Conference on Women, Law, and Social Control
Mont Gabriel, Québec. Vancouver: International Centre for Criminal Law Reform and Criminal Justice Policy.
Rethinking judicial paternalism: gender, work-family relations, and sentencing
Gender and Society 3(1), 9-36.
Neither conflict nor labeling nor paternalism will suffice: intersections of race, ethnicity, gender, and family in criminal court decisions
Crime and Delinquency 35(1), 136-68.
Litigation-driven research: a case study of lawyer-social scientist collaboration
Women’s Rights Law Reporter 10(4), 221-41.
The social control of sexuality: a case study of the criminalization of prostitution in the Progressive Era
Pp. 171-206 in Steven Spitzer and Andrew T. Scull (eds.) Research in Law, Deviance, and Social Control, Vol. 9. Greenwich CT: JAI Press.