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echo: mens_issues
to: All
from: `philip Lewis` nottellin
date: 2005-03-27 12:49:00
subject: Re: Female crime and punishment

If putting women in prison breaks up familes what kind of parent was the
mother in the first place?
After all - a caring parent would not be one engaged in the kind of criminal
activity that could result in their incarceration.
This is yet another VERY thinly disguised move by a highly BIGOTED section
of established society which is seeking to find WHATEVER pretext for giving
preferential treatment to women.
This is also fromm those who in other comtexts DEMAND 'equal treatemt' for
women - what fucking hypocrites!

Phil
 wrote in message
news:1111889903.060136.269450{at}g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Female crime and punishment
By Tom Geoghegan
BBC News Magazine



As the prison population rises, more and more women are being locked
up. Critics, however, believe women offenders should be treated
differently from men and now the government has outlined plans to build
female rehabilitation centres as an alternative to jail.

The fact the female prison population has nearly trebled in the last 10
years will be of little concern to some people. The punishment fits the
crime, they may say.

But the government is investigating another option. Home Secretary
Charles Clarke has just allocated £9m to build two new female
rehabilitation centres, following two pioneering schemes in Glasgow and
Worcester. Mr Clarke is concerned that locking up women breaks up
families.

The new "community and support centres" will offer non-violent female
offenders "one-stop shop" services for help with issues such as drug
abuse, mental health, housing, childcare and domestic violence.





Campaigners say the rocketing numbers of women prisoners is a shocking
story because most female offences are theft-related and the causes of
female crime differ to male crime, so require a different response.
For instance, they claim that half of women prisoners - far more than
men - have suffered physical, sexual or mental abuse.

Sarah Campbell, 18, died in Styal Prison, Cheshire, in 2003 after
taking a drugs overdose. She had 12 months left of her sentence for
manslaughter, a crime which her mother Pauline says was partly driven
by events in her childhood.

"Sarah was sexually abused when a child and this affected her
self-esteem, which was as low as being almost non-existent. There were
other factors too, but her card was marked from an early age."

Abused women use drugs and alcohol to blot it out and they need help
and treatment, not jail, says Mrs Campbell.

'Tough on crime'

One in three women in prison attempts suicide, says Andrew Mackie of
the Revolving Doors Agency, which campaigns for better provision in the
criminal justice system for people with mental illness. The separation
from children can lead to acute anxiety, despair and self-harm, he
adds.

So why has the female prison population risen so quickly? Vera Baird MP
claimed last year there was an "anti-feminist backlash" in the courts.


The Fawcett Society, where Charles Clarke made his announcement, says
the single most common offence for which women are sentenced to prison
is shoplifting and they are twice as likely to be sent to prison for
this crime as 10 years ago.
"There's a 'tough on crime' message and a notion in the public arena
that women are increasingly turning to violent crimes, with media
stories about girl gangs," says senior policy officer Holly Dustin.

"But the fact is women offending patterns are not getting significantly
worse, and not related to the number of women in prison."

Some evidence suggests women also suffer from harsher sentences if they
don't appear vulnerable in court, she adds.

Does this mean putting women's needs ahead of men's?

"We're not asking for them to be treated better but appropriately,"
says Ms Dustin.



That's not a view shared by everyone, including Norman Brennan, founder
of the Victims of Crime Trust. "There's more women in jail than ever in
this country because more women are committing more violent, serious
and persistent crimes.
"It's nonsense to say there's too many women in prison. Judges and
magistrates already bend over backwards not to send women to prison, so
the prison population should actually be higher.

"I've no problem with people being rehabilitated but a number of women
are so hardened to crime they, just like men, see it as no more than a
short respite."

Any history of abuse is already taken into account in pre-sentence
reports, he says.

Scottish solution

The home secretary disagrees and believes the solution may lie in
Glasgow, where a project called 218 Time Out is regarded as a model in
dealing with women offenders. The two new centres, in unnamed locations
in England and Wales, may be run along similar lines.

218 Time Out receives referrals from courts, social workers and police
across the country. It works as an alternative to prison and combines a
detox facility, residential unit and day programmes, to reduce
re-offending and drug abuse.



The first of its kind in the UK when set up last year, it advises
offenders on housing, childcare, benefits, drug use, interpersonal
communications and self-esteem. The women are usually convicted of
non-violent crimes, but some have attempted murder under provocation.
"Usually by the end of the second programme they've stopped
re-offending," says service manager Sophia Young. "There seems to be a
serious problem in England with re-offending and suicide rates, all the
problems that we had and we're trying to address here."

 WOMEN IN PRISON
Female prison population 4,392 at March 2005, up 173% in 10 years
Male 70,857, up 50% for same period
16% of women in prison committed violent offences
50% report domestic violence, one-third childhood sexual abuse
5% of children of women prisoners are cared for at home by the father
Source: Prison Service, Women in Prison charity


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/magazine/4373253.stm

Published: 2005/03/23 11:37:44 GMT

© BBC MMV




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