Rafter achieved a
Ph.D. in
Criminal Justice from
State University of New York, Albany, which sparked her academic career in
feminist criminology. Thereafter, she began writing about delinquent individuals. Her first publication on this topic was in 1969, with her first group of writings was released throughout the 1980s. Rafter began researching and creating arguments for the
feminist cause after her book
White Trash: the Eugenic Family Studies 1877-1919. This led to her 1997 course at
Northeastern University entitled Gender, Representation, and Social Control. This served to teach criminology students knowledge of the workings of prison institutions and their reciprocal influences. In the 2000s she began focusing on the representation of
crime films in mass media and culture. She explored this in her 2006 paper
Shots in the Mirror: Crime Films and Society. At the same time, she began research into the biological theories of crime. In 2004 she wrote
Earnest A. Hooton and the Biological Tradition in American Criminology, examining the historical importance of
Earnest Hooton’s theories of biological explanations of crime while crediting Hooton with building a history for
criminology. She also wrote an introduction for
Cesare Lombroso’s
Criminal Women in 2004. In the first decade of the 21st century, Rafter published three works relating to crime films and criminology. These works include
Badfellas: Movie Psychos, Popular Culture, and Law,
Shots in the Mirror: Crime Films and Society, and
Crime, Film, and Criminology: Recent Sex Crime Movies. In 2008 she published
The Criminal Brain: Understanding Biological Theories of Crime. ==Contributions to feminist criminology==