GENDER RESPONSIVE (IN)JUSTICE: THE LIMITS OF ‘WOMEN-CENTRED’ REFORM AND THE CASE FOR ABOLITION

Bree Carlton
Monash University
GENDER RESPONSIVE (IN)JUSTICE:
THE LIMITS OF ‘WOMEN-CENTRED’
REFORM AND THE CASE FOR
ABOLITION
Gendered justice?
 National increase of 60% among
women compared to 35% among
men (ABS 2010)
 1999-2009: the Victorian women’s
prisoner population increased by
67.9%
 2008-2009: women’s prisoner
numbers grew by 30%
Source: Department of Justice Victoria 2010
The issues being talked about today, we were
talking about in 1985 when women were locked up
at Pentridge. Muster has now grown from 20 to
350 women but nothing has changed except now
there are more issues. Everyone writes
recommendations, but nothing has changed.
Woman with lived experience cited in VPDCPC
Inquiry 2010
Institutional violence
That’s actually the one thing where women
could gain strength in prison, because away
from that domestic violence they can sort of
come out of themselves and regain a bit of
self-esteem, regain a bit of self-respect, but
not in the prison environment. It’s a very rare
woman that can do it … because the system
becomes the abusive partner when you get to
prison. Gwen
Institutional racism
It all goes back to the Stolen Generation and
fragmentation of families that happened
then … This is what bred the current crisis of
young people being incarcerated, taken into
care, put in prison … it’s such a cliché to say
it’s the Stolen Generation all over again but it
kind of is … except we’re just locking them all
up in prison and juvenile justice places …
Aboriginal women in prison are all products in
some way of the Stolen Generation. Gwen
Economic marginalisation
[There’s no] … addressing the traumas [inside
prison] and in fact she comes out [at] higher risk
…. She’s coming out to homelessness, she’s
potentially lost her supports that were in place
before she went in and she’s coming out with
absolutely no chance really, of her having [been]
rehabilitated through that time. It is a break for
her body, physical break for her body … a little
rest but that’s it. There’s no fixing, there’s no real
rehabilitation in it whatsoever. Fiona, support
worker
Social exclusion
It’s just difficult, man, and there’s these little reminders like that
every day, every day, and silent phones and empty letterboxes and
fucking empty cupboards and then what is available? What you can
get is some escape from this if you can go somewhere else and I
suppose for the other women, the drugs take them somewhere else,
and where’s the incentive to come back? Ella
The loneliness is weird ‘cause, like when you’re in jail, all you want is
... to be alone …. And you get out and you are alone but it’s a
different ... kind of aloneness. You know, like I’m in a flat, I can hear
all the noises from the other flats and everything … I still don’t feel
like I’m – I still feel like I exist in this separate little universe. Liz
Surviving marginalisation
‘But nobody addresses the underlying issues of
emotional and psychological stuff that has
happened to you while in custody…You are
constantly in survival mode; it is a hostile
environment. The things that you experience in
there never get addressed.’
‘Last time I was in prison [I was with] the
grandchildren of the women I had been in prison
for the first time around’.
Women with lived experience cited in VPDCPC
Inquiry 2010
Social Exclusion
‘Imprisonment becomes an easier alternative
than struggling outside. There is a loss of
freedom inside but at least it’s a community
you know. The abuse in prison is easier than
the abuse of outside, because it’s structured
and stable; you know what it is, and have
learnt how to detach. Outside prison is
scarier, you feel hopeless’.
Women with lived experience cited in VPDCPC
Inquiry 2010
The Precariousness of survival
Six months before my release I started noting down
deaths...I have got all the names and it was 11. There was
11 and that was in that 15-month period that I was in
prison…. People would be amazed if you told them there
was only 300 women in prison in Victoria. That’s when it
becomes important...Everyone in prison or post-release
women would know these women… it’s a small community.
I could just reel off to you now 150 of the names of 200
women in prison that we see every day...So in that sense
we know them and I don’t know why it is a subject that’s
not talked about. Aileen
I had a few moments in this last three months
where I know what happened to those women; I
know when they had that thought, so you’ve got
80 cents in the bank, you’ve got a crisis
accommodation ... You’re 23 hours with your own
thoughts on your own looking maybe at the
futility of your life, especially if they’re women
like myself, middle-aged. I don’t want to be
weak, I don’t want to be needy, but you can’t get
a foothold, everything is difficult. Ella
The future?