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1 Asia Johnson, Fighting for Dignity: Incarcerated Women Speak 1 (2022)

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Fighting



for Dignity


Incarcerated Women Speak

By Asia Johnson
PUBLISHED OCTOBER 20,2022


In  2009, 1 became a resident at the Women's Huron
   Valley Correctional Facility, the only women's prison
   in the state of Michigan. Prior to my incarceration,
those who were locked behind bars never crossed my
mind. I fell victim to the stereotypes and media narratives
about prisoners - that they were all there because they
deserved to be. That myth was quickly dispelled the
moment  I was without my freedom. Every single woman
in prison - every single person in prison - has a story
and a life beyond the crime for which they were convicted.
  On the inside, I learned everything I could about the
women  there with me. What led them to the worst day
of their lives? What were their childhoods like? What did
they dream of becoming? And how did they continue
dreaming while living in a nightmare?
  While the experiences of women behind bars are not
universal, I found that there are important aspects that
are shared. This paper contributes to a more comprehen-
sive understanding by exploring the lived experiences and
sentiments of women in several states who are currently
serving time. One theme is the experience of trauma. For
many women, traumatic experiences - including physical
and emotional abuse - have brought them in contact
with the legal system. These unaddressed traumas are
then compounded by a sense of unfairness in the criminal


justice process and inhumane treatment in correctional
facilities. To survive these experiences, women develop
coping mechanisms   that sustain them  until their
sentences are up.
  I was six years old when a relative's 26-year-old friend
began molesting me, and the abuse continued for months.
When  my family realized what was happening to me, my
abuser suffered no consequences. I grew up feeling
confused and  unprotected. I didn't understand the
emotions I was experiencing or know how to express
them. Even though I knew the abuse was wrong, I started
to believe it was normal - that it was something all little
girls go through.
  Living in fear at home forced me to rely on my inner
strength to get through each day, and, strangely, it also
meant finding a sense of safety once I began venturing
out into my city. I was unafraid when I encountered
danger in Detroit, thinking it couldn't be worse than the
abuse I had endured. In my mind, I was strong enough to
handle whatever threats were out there. I swallowed the
pain, internalized the trauma, and put on my best face for
the world as long as I could.
  In 2009, Forbes named Detroit the most violent city in
America? That year, 365 people were murdered2 - my
grandmother among them, by my hands.


Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law


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