For many years, women prisoners have been denied the same facilities and services as men and their particular needs have been overlooked. Corrections practices and policies reflect not only attention to cost-cutting and economies of scale, but also an ideology of sexism. This article gives examples of the unequal and inadequate treatment of women in prison in Victoria, Australia, and then takes four policy issues which have negative consequences for women. Analysis of female prison populations points to the need for non-custodial sentences, affirmative action in vocational/work areas and programmes for drug abusers. For too long, governments have emphasized control, punishment and smooth management to the exclusion of facilities and program...
From the article: My purpose here is to situate gender as a key factor in a historical movement towa...
The article examines male and female inmate graffiti in a decommissioned Australian jail, a holding ...
What are the differences between "women's prisons" and "men's prisons"? That question is answe...
This veteran correctional administrator reviews the explosion of numbers of female offenders confine...
The time has arrived for a more detailed analysis of the specific needs of female offenders. Even th...
Women’s imprisonment campaigns gathered momentum in Victoria, Australia from the late 1970s on...
Female imprisonment rates have dramatically increased over the last two decades at state, national a...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Female imprisonment rates have dramatically increased over the last two decades at state, national a...
This article examines women’s imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Women’s prisons occupy a unique position in many correctional systems: they are the proverbial thorn...
This Article discusses gender relations in prison systems and the plight of gay, lesbian, bisexual, ...
This chapter focuses on two aspects of those neoliberal policies: the privatisation of Ministry of J...
This article considers the potential of rights-based advocacy to respond to the troubling reality of...
Decades after a government report on deep inequity in the vocational offerings of the nation\u27s cr...
From the article: My purpose here is to situate gender as a key factor in a historical movement towa...
The article examines male and female inmate graffiti in a decommissioned Australian jail, a holding ...
What are the differences between "women's prisons" and "men's prisons"? That question is answe...
This veteran correctional administrator reviews the explosion of numbers of female offenders confine...
The time has arrived for a more detailed analysis of the specific needs of female offenders. Even th...
Women’s imprisonment campaigns gathered momentum in Victoria, Australia from the late 1970s on...
Female imprisonment rates have dramatically increased over the last two decades at state, national a...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Female imprisonment rates have dramatically increased over the last two decades at state, national a...
This article examines women’s imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
Women’s prisons occupy a unique position in many correctional systems: they are the proverbial thorn...
This Article discusses gender relations in prison systems and the plight of gay, lesbian, bisexual, ...
This chapter focuses on two aspects of those neoliberal policies: the privatisation of Ministry of J...
This article considers the potential of rights-based advocacy to respond to the troubling reality of...
Decades after a government report on deep inequity in the vocational offerings of the nation\u27s cr...
From the article: My purpose here is to situate gender as a key factor in a historical movement towa...
The article examines male and female inmate graffiti in a decommissioned Australian jail, a holding ...
What are the differences between "women's prisons" and "men's prisons"? That question is answe...