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Designing Programming and Interventions for Women in the Criminal Justice System
Authors:Martin T. Hall  Seana Golder  Cynthia L. Conley  Susan Sawning
Affiliation:1. Kent School of Social Work, University of Louisville, 209 Oppenheimer Hall, Louisville, KY, 40292, USA
2. Kent School of Social Work, University of Louisville, 207 Patterson Hall, Louisville, KY, 40292, USA
3. Department of Social Work, Ball State University, North Quad Building, NQ 273, Muncie, IN, 47306, USA
4. School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, 27514, USA
Abstract:Women are the fastest growing segment of the criminal justice population, yet the majority of research on criminal justice populations has been focused on men. Programming and interventions that reduce women’s involvement in the criminal justice system and ameliorate the negative consequences associated with criminal justice involvement are urgently needed. The overall aim of this paper is to provide a comprehensive framework for developing evidence-based, gender-specific programming and interventions to reduce criminal justice involvement and its associated consequences among women in the criminal justice system. The first section of the paper offers a conceptually guided review of the three primary factors that facilitate and complicate women’s involvement in the criminal justice system: victimization; mental disorders; and substance use. In the second section of the paper, findings from focus groups conducted with women on probation or parole identify strategies to engage this population in psychosocial interventions. The third and final section of the paper provides comprehensive recommendations for designing programming and interventions for women in the criminal justice system.
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