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Incarceration of Women

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Incarceration of Women Chapter 12 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Acknowledging Gender: Key Differences Sex & gender differences Health issues ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Incarceration of Women


1
  • Incarceration of Women
  • Chapter 12

2
Acknowledging Gender Key Differences
  • Sex gender differences
  • Health issues
  • Violence against women children
  • Interrelationship between substance
  • abuse, mental health trauma
  • Socioeconomic status employment
  • education

3
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 ignored by the justice system
  • women constitute a small proportion of the U.S.
    prison population (7) but the number of women
    prisoners is increasing faster than that of men
    prisoners.

4
Womens Prisons
  • 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

5
Female Prison Reform in 1800s
  • separation of women from men
  • provision of differential care for women
  • management of womens prisons by female staff
  • Elizabeth Fry 19th century English Quaker who
    was a champion of womens prison reform

6
Characteristics of Women in the Criminal Justice
System
  • More than one million women are currently under
    criminal justice supervision in the U.S.
  • Women comprise 17 of the total number of
    offenders under CJ supervision
  • The number of women in state and federal prisons
    increased over nine-fold, from 12,300 in 1980 to
    114,979 in 2009.

7
Women in the C.J. System
  • The number of women in prison has increased at
    nearly the double the rate of men since 1985,
    404 vs. 209.
  • Women have not become more violent as a
    group.Women are less likely than men to
    incarcerated for a
  • violent offense (35 vs. 53)
  • Women are more likely to have been convicted of
    crimes involving property (30) or drugs (29)
    .
  • Drug offenses represent the largest source of
    population growth for women, as opposed to
    violent offenses for men.

8
Who are the Women?
  • Disproportionately women of color
  • In their early to mid-thirties
  • Most likely to have been convicted of a property
    or drug offense
  • Fragmented family histories with other family
    members in the CJ system
  • Survivors of physical and/or sexual abuse

9
  • Significant substance abuse problems
  • Multiple physical mental health
  • problems
  • Unmarried mothers of minor children
  • High school degree/GED
  • Limited vocational training
  • Sporadic work histories

10
Women in California Prisons
  • The female prison population in California has
    grown more rapidly than the male prison
    population.
  • Between 1983 and 2009, the number of women
    incarcerated in California increased five-fold,
    from about 2,000 to 11,000. There are currently
    9,500 women in CA prisons.
  • Women make up about 7 of the prison population.
  • There are 12,000 women on parole.
  • Women make up about 12 of the parole population.

11
Offense Profiles of CA Female Inmates
  • In 2007, over two-thirds of female inmates in
    California prisons were serving sentences for
    property (33), drug (28) or other offenses
    (7).
  • In 2007, 30 of female inmates were serving
    sentences for crimes against persons as compared
    to 52 of male inmates.

12
Race Ethnicity
  • African American women comprise only 13 of all
    women in the U.S., yet they make-up nearly half
    of the women in State and Federal prisons.
  • In 2005, Black women were more than three times
    as likely as white women to be incarcerated in
    prison or jail.
  • Similarly, in California, African American women
    and Latinas are overrepresented in our prison
    system.

13
The Context of Womens Lives
  • Pathways Perspective
  • Relational Cultural Theory
  • Trauma Theory
  • Addiction Theory

14
Substance Abuse
  • Approximately 80 in state prisons have substance
    abuse problems
  • About half had been using alcohol, drugs, or both
    at the time of their offense
  • Nearly 1 in 3 women in state prisons report
    committing the offense to support a drug habit
  • Women offenders in state prisons report higher
    drug usage than their male counterparts

15
The Drug-Crime Connection for Women
  • Onset in women faster deeper
  • Onset of drugs first, crime usually follows
    closely
  • Dual diagnosis relationship
  • Role of self-medication trauma

16
Violence Against Women and Children
  • Witnessing domestic violence as a childmay cause
    increased vulnerability to victimization in
    adulthood
  • Women in the CJ system have extensive histories
    of physical sexual abuse and are 3 times more
    likely than men to have a history of abuse
  • One-third of women in state prison one-quarter
    of those in jails report being raped at some time
    in their lives
  • Womens substance abuse is highly correlated with
    physical sexual abuse

17
Mental Health
  • Women in the criminal justice system have a
    higher incidence of mental disorders than women
    in general
  • Female inmates in state prisons had higher rates
    of mental health problems than male inmates (73
    of females vs. 55 of males)
  • Women offenders have histories of abuse
    associated with psychological trauma
  • Approximately 75 with serious mental illness
    also have co-occurring substance abuse disorders
  • Women with mental illness co-occurring
    disorders experience difficulties in prison
    jail settings

18
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

19
Key Issues in the Incarceration of Women
  • educational vocational training
  • female programs tend to reflect stereotypical
    female occupations
  • medical services
  • women have more serious health problems In 2004,
    one of every 42 (2.4) women in prison was
    diagnosed as HIV positive compared to one of
    every 59 (1.7) men
  • mothers their children
  • majority of women are mothers

20
Children
  • Approximately 70 of women under correctional
    supervision have at least 1 child under 18
  • Two-thirds of incarcerated women have children
    under 18
  • An estimated 1.3 million minor children have a
    mother under correctional supervision
  • More than a quarter of a million children have
    mothers in jail or prison

21
Why Punish The Children?
  • Incarceration takes a significant toll on
    children who often witness their mothers arrest
    and are at risk of being separated from their
    siblings, either by being placed with relatives
    or in foster care.
  • It is estimated that children of offenders are
    five times more likely than their peers to end up
    in prison themselves.
  • One in ten will have been incarcerated before
    reaching adulthood.

22
Major Differences Between Male and Female
Prisoners
  • Women prisoners receive fewer visits than their
    male counterparts. Many states have only one
    womens prison which is located far away from
    children and families
  • Women are less violent
  • Women form close relationships and pseudo
    families while men join gangs
  • Women were usually the primary caretaker of
    children prior to incarceration and plan to
    reunite with their children upon their release
    from prison

23
National Institute of Corrections
Gender- Responsive Strategies
(Bloom, Owen, Covington (2003) Guiding
Principles
  • Acknowledge that gender makes a difference.
  • Create an environment based on safety, respect,
    and dignity.
  • Develop policies, practices, and programs that
    are relational and promote healthy connections
    to children, family, significant others, and the
    community.

24
Guiding Principles Continued
  • Address substance abuse, trauma, and mental
    health issues through comprehensive, integrated,
    and culturally relevant services.
  • Provide women with opportunities to improve
    their socio-economic conditions.
  • Establish a system of comprehensive and
    collaborative community services.

25
Barriers Facing Women Returning to their
Communities
  • Welfare Benefits
  • Housing
  • Education and Employment
  • Reunification with Children

26
Legal Barriers
  • Personal Responsibility Work Opportunity Act of
    1996
  • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
  • Higher Education Act of 1998
  • Public Housing - Section 8
  • Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997

27
Recommendations for Improving Reentry Services
for Women
  • Alternatives to incarceration should be the
    sanction of first choice.
  • For women who are incarcerated, planning for
    reentry should begin at the start of the prison
    sentence.
  • Women should be released from prison with the
    tools and support they need to succeed in the
    community.
  • Communities should be provided with the necessary
    resources to assist women and their families.
  • Public policies should promote family and
    community well-being.

28
The California Approach
  • Instituting, for the majority of female offenders
    who will be released to the community, a reentry
    plan at reception.
  • Promoting a continuity-of-care model which
    provides support services from incarceration
    through transition to the community.
  • Designing wraparound services for each individual
    woman including substance abuse, mental health,
    trauma, family reunification, housing, financial
    assistance, educational, employment, childcare,
    transportation, and advocacy.
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