Study of the sociodemographic, clinical and criminological characteristics of Tunisian female offenders
N. Smaoui, O. Bouattour, I. Gassara, R. Feki, M. Bou Ali Maalej, J. Ben Thabet, L. Zouari, M. Maalej, N. Charfi, S. Omri

TL;DR
This study examines the characteristics of female offenders in Tunisia, finding they are often young, have low education, and suffer from mental disorders.
Contribution
The study provides a detailed profile of Tunisian female offenders based on psychiatric expertises over 24 years.
Findings
Most female offenders were under 40, had low education, and were unemployed.
76.8% of the women had mental disorders, with personality disorders being the most common.
Offences against persons, especially homicides, were more frequent than property crimes.
Abstract
The psychopathology of female crime perpetrators is not well understood since female criminality rates have remained distinctly lower than male criminality. This study draws on over 20 years of psychiatric expertises to identify sociodemographic, clinical, and forensic characteristics of female perpetrators. To describe the epidemiological and clinical profile of female offenders examined for criminal psychiatric expertise.Describe the criminological and forensic characteristics of these women. To describe the epidemiological and clinical profile of female offenders examined for criminal psychiatric expertise. Describe the criminological and forensic characteristics of these women. Retrospective and descriptive study, which focused on 56 criminal psychiatric expertise files of female offenders, examined at the psychiatric department “C” at the CHU Hedi Chaker in Sfax, Tunisia, over…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCriminal Justice and Corrections Analysis
