Narratives of Doubly Marginalized Women: Interstitial Stigma and Mixed Migration Marriages in a Conflict Zone
Narratives of Doubly Marginalized Women: Interstitial Stigma and Mixed Migration Marriages in a Conflict Zone
Edna Erez Peter R. Ibarra Revital Sela-Shayovitz a University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, USAb Ono Academic College, Kyriat Ono, IsraelEdna Erez is Professor of Criminology, Law, and Justice at the University of Illinois Chicago. Her research interests and publications focus on victim participation in and input into criminal justice proceedings, violence against women, including migrant women and women in mixed relationships, and terrorism research, with particular attention to victims, perpetrators, and penological responses. She is a past editor of Justice Quarterly and a current co-editor of the International Review of Victimology.Peter R. Ibarra is Professor of Criminology, Law & Justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His interests include constructivist processes in criminal justice-related settings, surveillance studies, gender violence, comparative field research, ethnography, and theories of deviance and social problems. His recent publications appeared in such journals as Qualitative Sociology, The American Sociologist, and Criminology and Criminal Justice.Revital Sela-Shayovitz is Professor and vice-dean for research in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Ono Academic College. Her research focuses on youth violent crime, violence against women, and crime and media. Her research has been published in leading journals in Europe and the US, such as the British Journal of Criminology, Journal of Experimental Criminology, Feminist Criminology, Violence against women, and Crime and Media.