Discussion 7
The incarceration
of women
SECTION X
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Historical Context of Female Prisons
- Historically, women were housed in a separate unit within a male prison
- Conditions included
Solitary confinement
Physical and sexual abuse
Death of Rachel Welch
Unmonitored time with male inmates
- In 1839, the first facility for women was opened, The Mount Pleasant Prison Annex
- While a female warden was in place, the Annex was under the supervision of male Sing Sing administrators
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Historical Context of Female Prisons
- Reform
- Elizabeth Fry
- Inspiration for women in the U.S.
- Responsibility of women in the community to help female offenders
- Indiana Women’s Prison (1873)
- First stand-alone female prison
- Included maximum security
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Historical Context of Female Prisons
- Institution Models
- Custodial institutions
- Similar to the warehousing of male inmates with little opportunity for reform
- More prevalent in the South
- More likely to house women of color even if they committed a minor offense
- Dismal conditions
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Historical Context of Female Prisons
- Institution Models
- Reformatory
- Intent to rehabilitate women, improve their moral character
- Unladylike offenses
- Indeterminate sentences, until reformed
- Reserved for white, working-class women
- Had female guards and administrators
- Programming seen as “patriarchy at its finest”
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Historical Context of Female Prisons
- Reformatory Examples
- Massachusetts Correctional Institution (1877)
- Now more similar to a male institution
- California Institution for Women (1960s)
- Gendered programs
- Impact of California’s Uniform Determinate Sentencing Act (1976)
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Historical Context of Female Prisons
Today, most states have at least one women’s prison
House all security levels
Located in remote areas
- Women are less likely to see their families
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Contemporary Issues for Incarcerated Women
- There has been a dramatic rise in the number of women incarcerated in the U.S.
- Women of color are overrepresented
- Incarceration rates often three times greater than white women
- Women who struggle
- Impoverished, unemployed, undereducated
- Overcrowding in prison facilities
- Increases in stress, anxiety, and suicidal ideation
- Facility resources are lacking
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Contemporary Issues for Incarcerated Women
- Social support inside prison
- Previous relationships
- New relationships
- Trust is difficult
- Severance (2005) categorized female inmate relationships
- Acquaintances
- Friends
- Family
- Girlfriends
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Physical and Mental Health Needs
- CJ system is often ill-equipped to deal with issues
- Women inmates have significantly higher rates of mental illness
- “Pains of imprisonment” exacerbate mental health issues
- Suicidal ideation
- Resources needed for screening and treatment
- Medication used as a “cure-all”
- Failure to take medicine can result in sanctions
- Limited access to therapeutic interventions
- Importance of trust and support
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Physical and Mental Health Needs
- Physical Health Needs
- Women inmates are more likely to be HIV+
- Hepatitis C
- Histories of abuse and risky lifestyles
- Drug Treatment
- Therapeutic communities
- Gender-specific drug treatment programs
- Address unique needs of women
- Participants more likely to be successful
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Physical and Mental Health Needs
- Facility Limitations
- Understaffed
- Lacking in diagnostic tools
- Demand for services significantly outweigh their availability
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Children of Incarcerated Mothers
- Children of inmates are at high risk for delinquency and future incarceration
- Pregnant inmates
- Concern regarding prenatal care and stress of prison life
- Delivery can be traumatic
- Shackling
- Mother and child are separated shortly after birth
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Children of Incarcerated Mothers
- Prison nursery programs in 9 states
- Bedford Hills Correctional Facility (NY)
- Includes parenting classes and support groups
- Women can stay up to 3 years
- Overnight visits with children
- Programs for children
- Concerns over whether children should be in prison
- Studies show children who are removed are more likely to be high-risk educationally and emotionally
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Children of Incarcerated Mothers
- Women inmates stress over who will take care of their children
- In other cases, children may be placed in foster care
- Adoption and Safe Families Act 1997
- Termination of parental rights after 15 months
- Location and financial concerns prevent frequent visits
- Telephone calls and letters
- Programs to help facilitate additional contact
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Children of Incarcerated Mothers
- Parenting skills programming
- Girl Scouts Beyond Bars program (GSBB)
- Girls visit their mothers twice a month to work on projects
- Allows mothers an active role
- Many positive benefits
- Programs such as GSBB require significant emotional, physical, and financial investment
- Volunteers
- Funding
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Reading 19
- Introduction
- Females constitute 7.5% of inmates
- Fastest growing population in the America’s prisons today
- 1977 to 2008, rate of incarceration of women grew by 943%
- Prior Research on Incarcerated Mothers
- Female prisoners share certain characteristics
- Poor, single, disproportionally racial minorities, on average, mothers have two children
- Most women in prison are incarcerated for drug-related offenses and were abusing drugs or alcohol
- Children continue to play a central role in women’s lives eben during imprisonment
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Reading 19
- Coping with Potential or Actual Separation Due to Imprisonment
- Stress and coping
- Methods and Data
- Results
- Being a good mother
- Disassociation from prisoner identity
- Mothering from prison
- Role redefinition
- Self transformation
- Planning and preparation
- Self-blame
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Reading 20
- Incarcerated women are vulnerable and often “invisible”
- Many women who enter correctional institutions suffer from mental health issues
- Depression
- Anxiety
- PTSD
- Addiction
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Reading 20
- Evolution of the Study
- Review of the literature
- Gaps in the literature
- Methods
- Conducted in a maximum security woman’s prison
- Findings
- Worse mental health
- Improved mental health
- No change in mental health
- Discussion
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e
© 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Mallicoat, Women and Crime: A Text/Reader 2e © 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.