On Colonial Laws and the Treatment of Young Female Delinquents in Senegal: The Case of Léonie Guèye
This article provides a rethinking of juvenile delinquency in colonial Senegal using gender as a critical category of analysis. It focuses on the case of Léonie Guèye, a thirteen-year-old girl sentenced three times for robbery. Acquitted in all three trials in virtue of Article 66 - as having acted without discernment - Léonie was nevertheless sent to Bambey penitentiary, a male institution. Wiener Zeitschrift für kritische Afrikastudien
https://dullahomarinstitute.org.za/acjr/resource-centre/Nr12_Konate.pdf/view
https://dullahomarinstitute.org.za/acjr/@@site-logo/DOI001 Logo-rgb.png
On Colonial Laws and the Treatment of Young Female Delinquents in Senegal: The Case of Léonie Guèye
This article provides a rethinking of juvenile delinquency in colonial Senegal using gender as a critical category of analysis. It focuses on the case of Léonie Guèye, a thirteen-year-old girl sentenced three times for robbery. Acquitted in all three trials in virtue of Article 66 - as having acted without discernment - Léonie was nevertheless sent to Bambey penitentiary, a male institution. Wiener Zeitschrift für kritische Afrikastudien