[Anderson, Lin. Driftnet. Edinburgh: Luath, 2003. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[---. Unpublished interview with Lorna Hill (Stirling, 11 September 2016).]Search in Google Scholar
[Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble. New York: Routledge, 2007. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[Engender, Scotland’s feminist organization. Engender.org. n.d. Web. 30 November 2016.]Search in Google Scholar
[Gerrard, Nicci. “Move over, Morse: female TV detectives are on the case now.” The Observer, 5 October 2014. Web. 25 October 2014.]Search in Google Scholar
[Guttridge, Peter. “Murder she wrote - and plenty of it: Denise Mina on her career.” The Guardian, 29 July 2007. Web. 20 October 2016.]Search in Google Scholar
[Halberstam, Judith. Female Masculinity. Durham and London: Duke UP, 1998. Print.10.1515/9781478002703]Search in Google Scholar
[Henry, Alex. “Denise Mina in Conversation with Alex Henry.” Dundee University Review of the Arts, 25 October 2013. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Hoskins, Richard. The Boy in the River. London: Macmillan, 2012. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[Kean, Danuta. “Blood, guts and girly gore: Why do female authors write nastier and more violent crime novels than men do?” The Daily Mail, 19 July 2012. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Martinson, Jane. “Can tackling awards inequality help close journalism’s gender gap?” The Guardian, 13 March 2016. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[McDermid, Val. Report for Murder. London: Harper Collins, 2004. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[McDermid, Val. “Niche off the leash: Val McDermid on progress in lesbian fiction.” The Independent, 11 September 2010. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Mina, Denise. Field of Blood. London: Orion, 2006. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[Mina, Denise. The Last Breath. London: Bantam, 2008. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[Munt, Sally. Murder by the Book: Feminism and the Crime Novel. London: Routledge, 1994. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[“NCA Human Trafficking Report reveals 21% rise in potential victims.” National Crime Agency. 16 December 2015. Web. 27 November 2016.]Search in Google Scholar
[Peto, Andrea. “Honouring Adrienne Rich, key ‘second-wave’ feminist writer and poet (1926-2012).” GEA - Gender and Education Association. 13 January 2013. Web. 6 February 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Plain, Gill. Twentieth Century Crime Fiction, Gender, Sexuality and the Body. U of Edinburgh P, 2001. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[Sanghani, Radhika. “Nicola Sturgeon: ‘We’ll never have gender equality until we stop domestic violence.’” The Daily Telegraph, 9 October 2015. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Scottish Government. “Domestic Abuse Recorded by the Police in Scotland, 2013-14 & 2014-15.” 27 October 2015. Web. 24 March 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Scottish Parliament. “Human Trafficking and Exploitation (Scotland) Bill.” 1 October 2015. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[Scottish Women’s Aid. “Scottish Women’s Aid Census Day 2015 finds 25,000 new cases of domestic abuse each year.” Scottish Women’s Aid. 7 December 2015. Web. 9 March 2016.]Search in Google Scholar
[Smith, Anna. The Dead Won’t Sleep. London: Quercus, 2011. Print.]Search in Google Scholar
[---. Interview with Lorna Hill (Email interview, 18 September 2015).]Search in Google Scholar
[Stop the Traffik, Global Coalition. “The Scale of Human Trafficking.” Stopthetraffick.org. n.d. Web. 16 January 2017.]Search in Google Scholar
[United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. “UNODC on human trafficking and migrant smuggling.” UNODC. N.d. Web. 21 December 2016.]Search in Google Scholar
[Wanner, Len. Tartan Noir. Glasgow: Freight, 2015. Print.]Search in Google Scholar