Items where Author is "Weare, Siobhan Francesca"
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2021) "I feel permanently traumatized by it" : Physical and emotional impacts reported by men forced to penetrate women in the United Kingdom. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 36 (13-14). pp. 6621-6646. ISSN 0886-2605
Weare, Siobhan Francesca and Barlow, Charlotte Frederica (2019) Women as co-offenders : Pathways into Crime and Offending Motivations. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 58 (1). pp. 86-103. ISSN 1468-2311
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2018) R v Ahluwalia (1993). In: Women’s Legal Landmarks : Celebrating the History of Women and Law in the UK and Ireland. Hart Publishing, Oxford. ISBN 9781782259770
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2018) From coercion to physical force : Aggressive strategies used by women against men in 'forced-to-penetrate' cases in the UK. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 47 (8). 2191–2205. ISSN 0004-0002
Potts, Amanda and Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2018) Mother, Monster, Mrs, I : A critical evaluation of gendered naming strategies in English sentencing remarks of women who kill. International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, 31 (1). pp. 21-52. ISSN 0952-8059
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2018) ‘Oh you’re a guy, how could you be raped by a woman, that makes no sense’ : towards a case for legally recognising and labelling ‘forced to penetrate’ cases as rape. International Journal of Law in Context, 14 (1). pp. 110-131. ISSN 1744-5523
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2017) Forced-to-penetrate cases : Lived experiences of men - Baseline Research Findings. Lancaster University.
Gillespie, Alisdair Allan and Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2017) The English legal system. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 9780198785439
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2017) Bad, mad or sad? : legal language, narratives, and identity constructions of women who kill their children in England and Wales. International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, 30 (2). pp. 201-222. ISSN 0952-8059
Weare, Siobhan Francesca (2017) R v Ahluwalia. In: Women’s legal landmarks : celebrating 100 years of women and law in the UK and Ireland. Hart Publishing. (Submitted)