Pubdate: Wed, 17 Nov 2004
Source: Chronicle, The (NC Edu)
Copyright: 2004 The Chronicle
Contact: http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/vnews/display.v?static_page=contactus
Website: http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2269
Author: Dan Englander
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)

FEMALE PRISON POPULATION HITS RECORD HIGH

The female population in state and federal prisons has soared to a record 
high in the United States and shows no sign of slowing, with the 
incarceration rate for women growing nearly twice as fast as that of men, 
the Department of Justice announced Sunday. North Carolina mirrors this 
national trend, recently experiencing difficulty housing this growing 
population of female inmates.

The increasing number of female prisoners has several social consequences 
as more and more children are growing up with incarcerated mothers. "[The 
women] have an impact on their children," said Jay Williams, visiting 
associate professor of sociology at Duke. "That could create more criminals 
[of their children,] and more criminals would have an impact on everyone on 
the Duke campus."

According to the Department of Justice's report, 101,179 women were in 
prisons last year in the United States, a 3.6 percent increase from the 
year before. Women account for almost 7 percent of the national prison 
population.

Even though the male prison population dwarfs the female population by a 
factor of almost 15, the number of women in prison has ballooned 48 percent 
since 1995, when only 68,468 women were incarcerated nationally. During 
that same period, the male prison population has grown much more slowly, at 
29 percent.

North Carolina echoes this nationwide trend-the total number of imprisoned 
women in the state rose to 2,256 inmates in 2003, up more than 500 
prisoners since 1995, according to the DOJ report.

Ryan King, a research associate for The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit 
advocacy organization that promotes alternatives to incarceration, said 
there are several reasons for the increase in the female prison population.

"It's been the war on drugs that has had the most significant impact [on 
the prison population]," King said. Typically, women become involved with 
drug abuse and become financially or psychologically tied with a man 
involved in drug crime, he said.

Women who had peripheral roles in the drug trade were not incarcerated at 
such high rates before the inception of the war on drugs in the 1980s and 
1990s, King explained. Now there are mandatory minimum sentences which put 
drug offenders in jail for five to 15 years.

Williams, on the other hand, speculated that the rising female prison 
population can be attributed to the fact that women are committing more 
violent crimes. "[Women] used to be involved in crimes like prostitution 
and property theft, but violent crime and person-to-person crime will get 
you into prison faster," he said.

"More people are going into prison and are staying there longer," King 
noted, citing changes in sentencing laws and stricter enforcement of laws 
as main reasons for the population increase in penitentiaries.

North Carolina is struggling to accommodate its increasing prison 
population. "We've known for the past several years that the growing 
women's population would exceed our capacity," said Keith Acree, a 
spokesperson for the North Carolina Department of Correction. Recently, he 
added, the state has been "bursting at the seams with inmates."

Paying for prisons presents a funding dilemma in many states, including 
North Carolina. Generally, state legislators would rather spend money on 
other projects, such as schools, than prisons. Since housing inmates 
carries high financial costs, it is often underfunded, causing overcrowding.

To ameliorate the crunch, however, the state was forced to build three new 
facilities, each holding up to 1,000 inmates, across the state. The state 
also converted a men's prison into a women's prison to mitigate the 
overcrowding in prisons across the state.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager