Essay On Women In Prison

1040 Words3 Pages

Women, by nature, tend to be much more social than men. Women also have a unique struggle when first going into prison. When women are put in prison, they have multiple things that need to be dealt with right away. At the PGRCC, many females first getting to prison are often intoxicated from alcohol, and or are high from narcotics. When they start to come off of their high, and the withdrawal sets in, so does reality. They start questioning what happened, how they got there, and (if applicable) where their children are? Their maternal instincts start to kick in. With this problem of the children, the Ministry of Child and Family Development (MCFD) gets involved. The ministry needs to talk to the woman in prison and try to find appropriate places …show more content…

Some women, however, are expecting mothers. So what exactly happens to these infants after birth, when their mothers are still incarcerated? In the past, the infant used to be taken right from the hospital, to a social worker who either brings the baby to another relative of the mothers, or in foster placements or group homes. However, a new program has recently been implemented in a Canadian prison. This type of program was first created and tested in American prisons. A program where a mother can keep her infant with her, behind bars, for a certain period of time. Bedford Hills Correctional Facility for Women allows for women inmates to keep their infants with them behind bars for up to 18 months (Brown, Valiente, 2014). There are strict rules for being able to apply, however, and to get into the program there. For example, women cannot be convicted of violent crimes, arson or crimes that involve any children (Brown, Valiente, 2014). Having a child in prison in the Bedford program costs up to $24,000 a year, which in the long run is cheaper than having a mother end up back in prison. It has been shown that women who keep their children with them during their jail time are less likely to end up back in jail. A study had shown that women who kept their infants with them in prison, had a 10 percent recidivism rate, compared to a 33 percent recidivism rate in those mothers who were separated from their children at birth (Brown, Valiente,

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