Women and wrongful convictions: concepts and challenges

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Women and wrongful convictions: concepts and challenges
Abstract
This paper draws from the wrongful convictions of women to interrogate the limits of dominant conceptions of wrongful conviction. Most North American innocence projects turn on a conception of demonstrable factual innocence. The paper argues that this focus is problematic as a matter of criminal law principle and presents particular difficulties for women. The paper identifies that family violence forms the primary context for both the conviction of women for violent crimes, and for women's wrongful convictions. Taking two key examples of family violence – child homicide and intimate partner violence – we illustrate that the prevailing focus on demonstrable factual innocence fits awkwardly with identified wrongful convictions in these areas, and argue that this focus may deflect attention from unidentified miscarriages of justice. We suggest that focusing on factual innocence undermines the criminal justice system's proper focus on state responsibilities, including the responsibility to protect women and children from harm, and the asymmetric burden of proof that applies in criminal cases.
Publication
International Journal of Law in Context
Volume
11
Issue
3
Pages
219-244
Date
2015/09
Language
en
ISSN
1744-5523, 1744-5531
Short Title
Women and wrongful convictions
Accessed
9/9/25, 8:47 PM
Library Catalog
Cambridge University Press
Citation
Parkes, D., & Cunliffe, E. (2015). Women and wrongful convictions: concepts and challenges. International Journal of Law in Context, 11(3), 219–244. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744552315000129