The Top 5 Facts About Women in Our Criminal Justice System
Many Face Difficulties During and After Incarceration
By Julie Ajinkya
Women are now incarcerated at nearly double the rate of men
in this country.
As we celebrate International Women’s Day and pay tribute to
the amazing feats that women have accomplished globally, we should also take
note of the work that remains to be done in making sure that women do not
suffer disproportionately due to their gender.
For instance, women are now incarcerated at nearly double
the rate of men in this country, yet they receive little attention in criminal
justice reform measures. This population has gender-specific needs that differ
from men in prison, primarily owing to the fact that they are often the primary
caregivers of their children before incarceration and are disproportionately
victimized by emotional, physical, and sexual abuse in their past. Instead of
investing in counseling treatment for such traumatic pasts and rehabilitative
treatment for substance addiction, the criminal justice system continues to
detain women at extraordinary rates for primarily nonviolent drug-related
offenses.
Below we outline the top five facts about women in our country’s criminal justice system.
1. The number of women incarcerated has grown by more than 800 percent over the last three decades and women of color are locked up far more often.
There are now more than 200,000 women behind bars and more
than 1 million on probation. Two-thirds are incarcerated for nonviolent
offenses, many of these drug-related crimes. Women of color are
disproportionately affected: African American women are three times more likely
than white women to be incarcerated, while Hispanic women are 69 percent more
likely than white women to be incarcerated.
2. Many women enter the criminal justice system with a disturbing history of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse.
A reported 85 to 90 percent of women who are either
currently incarcerated or under the control of the justice system in the United
States have a history of domestic and sexual abuse. Risk factors contributing
to women’s criminal behavior include substance abuse, mental illness, and
spousal abuse. It is estimated that up to 80 percent of women prisoners suffer
from substance addiction. While it would be much more cost effective to treat
these women than imprison them or pay for foster placement for their children,
they are refused such rehabilitative measures—measures that could facilitate
their integration back into society as productive members.
3. Many girls also enter the juvenile justice system with a disturbing history of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse.
Girls are disproportionately arrested for running away,
accounting for 59 percent of runaways, though they are often fleeing violent
home situations. Instead of receiving counseling and mental health services,
however, they are subject to humiliation and dehumanizing treatment in prisons.
Girls are also more likely than boys to be sexually victimized while serving
time in a facility.
4. Pregnant prisoners are often shackled during labor and delivery, risking the health of the mother and child.
While court cases have ruled that shackling women prisoners
to their beds during labor and delivery is inhumane and unconstitutional, the
practice continues in many state facilities. Women in prison are also routinely
denied basic reproductive health services, such as pregnancy testing, prenatal
care, screening and treatment for sexually transmitted infections, and access
to abortion services.
5. Women face further discrimination after release from prison.
After being released from prison, many women face barriers
in effectively re-entering society and providing for themselves and their
children. Women of color, who are disproportionately poor, find themselves
restricted from governmental assistance programs, such as housing, employment,
education, and subsistence benefits. Many states even impose statutory bans on
people with certain convictions working in certain industries such as nursing,
child care, and home health care—three fields in which many poor women and
women of color happen to be disproportionately concentrated.
Despite the fact that crime has continued to decline in this
country, our incarceration rates for nonviolent drug offenses have spiraled out
of control, and nowhere is this clearer than in the population of women—women
of color in particular. The treatment of women in our criminal justice system,
and the large-scale abandonment of children that it generates, are serious
issues for all of us to contend with as we think about the role of women in
today’s society.
Julie Ajinkya is a Policy Analyst with the Progress 2050
project at the Center for American Progress.
Lia Parada
lparada@americanprogress.org
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