Female Crime Research Paper

1479 Words3 Pages

Female criminal behavior has been commonly perceived as a less serious problem than male criminal behavior. Historically, women have been more likely to commit minor offenses and have made up only a small proportion of the offender population. Although women remain a relatively small number of all prisoners, these facts have concealed a trend in the rising percentage of female offenders, their participation in violent crime, and have inhibited the development of gender-specific programs to address the issue.
Females are doing hard time all across the United States. Many of them are facing the prospect of years, decades, even lifetimes behind bars. Oddly, our society knows almost nothing about these girls and women, much less why they have ended …show more content…

While men too have suffered as the United States continues its imprisonment binge, there has been a gender-based difference in the rates of this increase. This difference is most apparent among women of color. Others have examined the substantial impact of policy on the involvement of women in the criminal justice system. A study by the Sentencing Project found that, between 1986 and 1995, drug offenses account for about one-third of the rise in male prison population but fully half of the increase in the female prison population. “During this period, the number of women incarcerated for drug offenses rose an amazing 888 per cent; those incarcerated for other crimes rose 129 per cent. This difference is particularly marked in states with serious penalties for drug offenses. In New York, they argue, the notorious Rockefeller drug laws account for 91 per cent of the women's prison population increase; in California, drug offenses account for 55 per cent; and in Minnesota, a state committed to limiting incarceration to very serious offenses, only 26 per cent(3).” Compared to white women, women of color are also more likely to be arrested, convicted and incarcerated at rates higher than their representation in the free world …show more content…

Because many of these women are poor, from minority communities and behave in ways outside middle-class sensibilities, prison has become the uniform response to problems created by inequality and gender discrimination. These issues are best addressed outside the punitive custodial environment but the upward spiral in the number of women in prison represents a serious failure of conventional society and public policy. “Women in prison have been damaged by the oppression of patriarchy, economic marginalization and the far-reaching effects of such short-sighted and detrimental policies as the war on drugs and the over-reliance on incarceration (4).” Recidivism is often attributed to the characteristics of individual female offenders or to the conditions of their prison environments. Female offenders, who are usually incarcerated for nonviolent economic crimes, are predominantly poor, young, educationally disadvantaged, and high school dropouts, so it is not surprising that they are unskilled and were employed in low-income jobs before they went to prison. Furthermore, these women are often the heads of households with children under age 18 and have histories of victimization and alcohol and drug

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