{"id":10679,"date":"2019-03-06T10:54:42","date_gmt":"2019-03-06T15:54:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/invisiblepeople.tv\/?p=10679"},"modified":"2022-10-09T07:44:12","modified_gmt":"2022-10-09T11:44:12","slug":"invisible-trail-female-jail-cells-street","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/invisiblepeople.tv\/invisible-trail-female-jail-cells-street\/","title":{"rendered":"The Invisible Trail Between Female Jail Cells and the Street"},"content":{"rendered":"

For many former female convicts, homelessness is just another jail cell without bars. <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

You\u2019ve likely heard a few stories about the horrors of female imprisonment. If not, that\u2019s only because there have been many orchestrated attempts at keeping the cold hard facts and figures hidden from the general public. Prison privatization has unquestionably created an epidemic of mass incarceration unparalleled to anything previously seen in the history of the world. As such, incarceration statistics have justifiably caused quite a ruckus. But there is one number that isn\u2019t making as much noise as it should. That is the number of female inmates entering prisons in the United States. Statistics prove that women are the fastest growing prison population<\/a> and that this number has been trending upward since the late \u201870s.<\/p>\n

Why Are So Many Women Going to Jail?<\/h4>\n

The underlying causes are complex, to say the least, with gender-bias disciplinary measures being a leading cause for concern, and the criminalization of domestic abuse victims ranking pretty high as well. One thing that is certain is that most female inmates share a history of abuse<\/a>. In fact, The National Child Abuse Coalition released a report that showed nearly half of all female prisoners had experienced a form of childhood abuse prior to their sentencing.<\/p>\n

When it comes to trauma, neglect, and violence against women, life on the inside of a penitentiary only proves to be more of the same. Women behind bars have a significantly increased chance of becoming victims of sexual assault<\/a> while simultaneously being offered fewer opportunities for rehabilitation<\/a>. Rehabilitation is one of many needs among female convicts that are unabashedly being ignored. Other distinctly feminine issues cropping up in female prisons all the time include:<\/p>\n