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Incarceration of Women

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Chapter 12 Incarceration of Women Incarceration of Women Women: Forgotten Offenders Historical Perspective The Incarceration of Women in the United States The ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Incarceration of Women


1
Chapter 12
  • Incarceration of Women

2
Incarceration of Women
  • Women Forgotten Offenders
  • Historical Perspective
  • The Incarceration of Women in the United States
  • The Reformatory Movement
  • The Post-World War II Years
  • Women in Prison
  • Characteristics of Women in Prison
  • The Subculture of Womens Prison
  • Males versus Female Subcultures
  • Issues in the Incarceration on Women
  • Sexual Misconduct
  • Educational and Vocational Programs
  • Medical Services
  • Mothers and Their Children
  • Release to the Community

3
Why women tend to be the forgotten offenders
  • women commit fewer crimes than men
  • female criminality tends to be less serious than
    male criminality
  • historically, women have tended more often than
    men to be excluded from the justice system, by
    lenient treatment
  • women constitute a small proportion of the
    correctional population (6)
  • popular social attitude tends to put all females
    in a subservient position

4
Imprisonment of Women in The US
5
Institutionalized Sexismcaused by low status
of female criminality
  • womens prisons are located farther from friends
    family, inhibiting visits, especially for the
    poor
  • womens prisons lack diverse educational,
    vocational, and other programs available in mens
    prisons
  • womens prisons lack specialization in treatment
    and fail to segregate offenders who present
    special problems or have special needs

6
gender and crime whos arrested for what?
7
evolution of womens prisons
END of reformatory movement ran its course by
1935 no new correctional models
1st female-run prison for women Indiana, 1873 run
for women, by women
Alderson Prison West Virginia, 1927 1st federal
prison for women. Mary Belle Harris, warden
House of Shelter Detroit, post civil war 1st
reformatory for women. run by Zebulon Brockway
Elizabeth Fry 1780 - 1845 1st to press for reform
in treatment of women children
Womens Prison Asso. New York, 1844 created to
improve treatment of separate females from male
inmates
8
female prison reform in 1800s guiding principles
  • separation of women from men
  • provision of differential care for women
  • management of womens prisons by female staff

9
features distinguishing female from male prisons
womens prisons
shorter sentences
smaller
less committed to inmate code
looser security
inmate-staff relations less structured
less developed underground economy
less physical violence
10
female inmate profiles
  • predominately Black (46) or White (36)
  • between ages of 25 - 34 (50)
  • never married (45)
  • some high school (46) or graduated (23)
  • Similar to characteristics of male inmates

11
female prison subcultures (per Heffernan)
  • square (like gleaning)
  • situational offender
  • adheres to conventional norms values
  • the life (like jailing)
  • persistent offenders
  • act in prison as they did on the outside
  • antisocial, stand firm against authority
  • represent about half of female prisoners
  • cool (like doing time)
  • professionals controlled manipulative keep
    busy, play around, stay out of trouble and get
    out

12
pseudo-families
  • a distinguishing hallmark of the subculture in
    many womens prisons (as compared with mens)
  • women often cope with the stresses of
    incarceration by bonding together in extended
    families of convenience.
  • different women play the roles of various members
    of the family, including father, mother,
    siblings, grandchildren, even cousins

13
key issues in the incarceration of women
  • educational vocational training
  • female programs tend to reflect stereotypical
    female occupations
  • womens programs less ambitious than mens
  • medical services
  • women have more serious health problems
  • mothers their children
  • 167,000 American children (2/3 of whom are under
    10) have a mother in jail or prison
  • 65 of incarcerated mothers were single
    caretakers of minor children.

14
official sexual misconduct in prison
  • number of cases of misconduct by male officers in
    on increase, with increase in female inmates
  • e.g., Houston Cagle Susan Smith, 2000
  • Officers may abuse authority to compel sex by
    withholding goods and privileges to prisoners or
    by rewarding them with same
  • 42 states have enacted legislation prohibiting
    sexual misconduct
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