Women In Prison
Women have become the hidden victims of the state's zeal for
incarceration, as the number of California prisoners surged past the
100,000 mark in April of 1991.
California now has the uncertain distinction of having the most
women prisoners in the nation, as well as the world's largest women's
prison.
Since 1980, the number of women imprisoned in the us has tripled.
Now, on any given day, over 90,000 women are incarcerated in us jails
and prisons.
In 1992, there were 50,493 women incarcerated in federal and state
prisons. Amazingly, the rate of women's imprisonment grew from 6 per
100,000 in 1925 to 37 per 100,000 in 1992. The rate of
imprisonment in California is approximately 45 per 100,000.
It is important to add that the above data includes only time
served for women who have been released; therefore, the numbers
mentioned above may give the false impression that overall, women are
serving shorter sentences. In reality, that isnot the case.
When it comes down to it, this policy direction will not be
beneficial to families, nor will it keep families
intact.
According to the May 1994 issue report of Women's Economic
Agenda Project
Eleven things you should know about women in prison in the us:
- There are over 90,000 women in prison in the us today. The
majority are in prison for economic crimes. The most typical
convictions resulting in imprisonment for women are property crimes,
such as check forgery and illegal credit card use. 80% of women in
prison report incomes of less than $2,000 per year in the year before
their arrest, and 92% report incomes under $10,000.
- Of the women convicted of violent crimes, the vast majority were
convicted for defending themselves or their children from abuse. In
California alone there are 600 women in prison for killing their
abusers in self-defense. Average prison terms are twice as long for
killing husbands as for killing wives.
- 54% of women in prison are women of color.
- Ninety percent of women in prison are single mothers. They lose
contact with their children, sometimes forever. There are 167,000
children in the us whose mothers are incarcerated.
- The average age of women in prison is 29, and 58% have not
finished high school.
- Racism and economic discrimination are inextricably linked to
sexism in our culture, creating severe inequalities in the court
system and the prison system. For example, Black women are twice as
likely to be convicted of killing their abusive husbands than are
white women. Black women, on average, receive longer jail time and
higher fines than do white women for the same crimes.
- 25% of political prisoners in the us are women.
- The number of women in prison has increased 138% in the last ten
years. This is partly due to the worsening of economic conditions for
women, and also due to the increase in arrest rates due to the "war on
crime" and "war on drugs".
- Women prisoners spend on average 17 hours a day in their cells,
with one hour outside for exercise. Compare to men prisoners, who
spend, on average, 15 hours a day in their cells, with 1.5 hours
outside.
- The Women's High Security Unit at Lexington, KY, was closed in
1988 because of a national and international human rights campaign.
The prison kept the women in years of isolation in subterranean cells,
conducted daily strip searches, allowed extreme sleep deprivation
practices, and as policy, condoned a compete denial of privacy,
including male guards watching the showers, and an intense campaign of
sexual abuse.
- The late Senator Hart estimated that the annual cost of corporate
crime was between $174-231 billion dollars, while the economic cost of
"street crimes" (e.g. burglary and robbery) was $3-4 billion. We must
look at why the state focuses on enforcing laws which penalize the
types of actions take by poor and working class men and women while
systematically ignoring the more destructive white-collar crimes.
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