RT Article T1 A gender-comparative exploration of women’s and men’s pathways to prison in Thailand JF The Australian and New Zealand journal of criminology VO 53 IS 4 SP 536 OP 562 A1 Russell, Tristan A2 Jeffries, Samantha A2 Hayes, Hennessey A2 Thipphayamongkoludom, Yodsawadi A2 Chuenurah, Chontit LA English YR 2020 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1748567764 AB In feminist criminology, there is a growing body of research exploring gendered pathways into prison. However, this research has focussed predominantly on women. There are few gender comparative studies. Further, most feminist pathways research is western centric having, for the most part, been undertaken in the United States. Utilising categorical principal components analysis alongside descriptive statistics and illustrative case study examples, this paper adds to the feminist pathways research by describing and comparing women’s and men’s pathways to prison in Thailand. Three common pathways to prison emerged for both women and men: (1) peer group association/deviant lifestyle, (2) harmed and harming, (3) economically motivated. However, gendered variance was found within these common pathways. Further, two pathways emerged exclusively for women: (1) adulthood victimisation and dysfunctional intimate relationships, (2) naivety and deception. These results substantiate the notion that trajectories into prison are gendered, add empirical support to the feminist pathways perspective beyond the west, contribute to knowledge on how both women and men come to be in prison in Thailand, and in doing so, have utility for the development of gender-informed prison policies, and practices as per the United Nations Rules for the Treatment of Women Prisoners and Non-Custodial Measures for Women Offenders (the Bangkok Rules). K1 Women K1 Thailand K1 Prison K1 Pathways K1 Offending K1 Gender K1 Criminalisation DO 10.1177/0004865820954463