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1 Lawrence A. Greenfeld & Stephanie Minor-Harper, Women in Prison 1 (1991)

handle is hein.death/woprs0001 and id is 1 raw text is: U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Justice Programs
Bureau of Justice Statistics

Bureau of Justice Statistics
Special Report
Women in Prison

By Lawrence A. Greenfeld
and Stephanie Minor-Harper
BJS Statisticians
The number of women under the jurisdiction
of State and Federal prison authorities at
yearend 1989 reached a record 40,556.
Although the female inmate population had
grown by more than 27,000 since 1980, an
increase of over 200/6, females still com-
prised a relatively small segment of the
prison population - 5.7% at yearend 1989.
This report, based primarily on the 1986
Survey of Inmates in State Correctional
Facilities, describes women in State prisons
-their characteristics as a group, their
criminal history, and their past drug use.
Survey respondents in 1986 are compared
to those surveyed in 1979 to gain an
overview of the changes in the female
prison population.
Specific findings include the following:
* The rate of growth for female inmates
exceeded that for males In each year since
1981. From 1980 to 1989, the male popula-
tion increased by 112%, and the female
population by 202%.
* At yearend 1989, 549 men per 100,001
men in the resident population and 31
women per 100,000 women were serving
a prison sentence of more than a year.
* Among white and black non-Hispanic
women and Hispanic women of all races,
only the percentage of black, non-Hispanic
women in the female Inmate population
changed significantly, decreasing from 53%
in 1979 to 46% in 1986.
* An estimated 41% of the female inmates
in 1986 were in prison for a violent offense,
compared to 49% in 1979. Nearly half of

March 1991
Across the Nation the number of women
in prison has grown at a faster rate than
that of men. In a year-to-year compari-
son, the percentage of women is now
the highest it has ever been, beginning
with the first annual collection of prison
statistics in 1926.
This report describes the characteristics
of women in State prisons in 1986. It
provides a detailed profile of their crimi-
nal histories, prior use of drugs, self-
reported backgrounds of physical and
sexual abuse, and the custodial situa-
tions of their young children.
The prime source of this report, the
Survey of Inmates in State Correctional
Facilities, was conducted in 1986 and
will be repeated in the summer of 1991.
Thanks to the superb cooperation of
correctional personnel, this important
undertaking will continue to be a national
resource for addressing questions and
concerns about offenders sentenced to
prison.
Steven D. Dillingham, Ph.D.
Director
the women in prison for a violent crime in
1986 were serving time for a homicide.
* In 1986, 59% of the women in prison were
sentenced for a nonviolent crime: 17% for
fraud, 15% for larceny or theft, 12% for drug
offenses, and 5% for public-order offenses
such as commercial vice or weapons viola-
tions.
* More than two-thirds of the women in
prison were recidivists - having previously
been sentenced to probation or incarcera-
tion as either a juvenile or an adult. Nearly
half the women in prison (46%) had been

previously sentenced to incarceration or
probation at least twice; 31%, three or more
times; and 13%, six or more times.
* An estimated 89% of the women in State
prisons in 1986 had a current conviction for
a violent crime or an earlier sentence to
probation or incarceration for any offense.
* Women released from State prison in
1986 had served an average of 16 months.
Those convicted of a violent offense had
served an average of 27 months in prison,
about twice as long as released property
offenders (13 months) and drug offenders
(14 months).
* More than a third of the women serving
time for a violent crime had victimized a rel-
ative or intimate; about a fourth of the wo-
men in prison for violence were convicted
of the homicide of a relative or intimate.
9 A third of all female inmates reported that
they were under the influence of a drug at
the time of their offense; 39% said they
were using drugs daily in the month before
their offense, and 24% reported daily use of
a major drug (cocaine, heroin, methadone,
LSD, or PCP) in that month.
* An estimated 41% of the women in prison
reported that they had been previously sex-
ually or physically abused. Women incar-
cerated for a violent offense were the most
likely to report having previously experi-
enced physical or sexual abuse. Among
women incarcerated for a violent crime,
those who reported that they had been
abused were more likely than other off end-
ers to have victimized a relative or intimate.
* More than three-fourths of the women
in prison were mothers. Two-thirds of the
female inmates had children under age 18.

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