Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted September 5, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted September 5, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Report documents paths to prison for those experiencing intimate partner ********* data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== “Fatal Peril” researchers interviewed approximately 650 women serving time for ******* and manslaughter in two California prisons. Credit: Stanford University A new study provides extensive documentation of the “IPV-to-Prison Pipeline”—the pathways through which women who are survivors of intimate partner ********* (IPV) find themselves serving long prison sentences for acts of survival. The This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , “Fatal Peril: Unheard Stories from the IPV-to-Prison Pipeline and Other Stories Touched by *********,” is the product of a multi-year study by the Regilla Project, a research initiative of the Stanford ********* Justice Center that focuses on women incarcerated for ********* offenses growing out of their own ******. “Fatal Peril” gives voice to approximately 650 people serving time for ******* and manslaughter in two California prisons, the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla and the California Institution for Women in Chino. Through surveys proctored at the prisons in July and November 2023, the researchers sought to better understand how people experiencing IPV are criminalized for actions they took to survive ******. Stanford students contributed to the proctoring, data analysis, and drafting of the report. A first-ever approach to IPV research The study represents the first time the Composite ****** Scale and Danger Assessment, two validated instruments used to assess intimate partner ********* and intimate partner *********, have been used in the study of a population who is incarcerated. In addition to quantitative results, the report presents qualitative data collected from hundreds of study respondents who shared their experiences of ******, the circumstances of the offenses, their experiences of the ********* legal system, and their feelings of regret, remorse, and healing. The women’s self-reported testimonies of surviving ****** are remarkably similar, according to Debbie Mukamal, executive director of the Stanford ********* Justice Center, who led the study with Dr. Andrea N. Cimino, an expert in gender-based ********* research. Mukamal and Cimino serve as directors of the Regilla Project, which released a companion report in 2023. “The stories of these women reflect a persistent belief that their lives were in danger,” Mukamal said, “often from an accumulation of their intimate partner’s threats and attempts to ***** them, their children, or other loved ones.” “These are a group of forgotten women,” Cimino said. “Their experiences of ********* were silenced in the courtroom and they have been neglected in IPV research which focuses on non-incarcerated populations.” She hopes the study amplifies survivor’s voices and creates change in the ********* legal system. David Sklansky, Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and the faculty co-director of the Stanford ********* Justice Center, said, “Our practices of ********* blaming and punishment have long ******* to take adequate account of the realities of intimate partner *********, and of the ways in which abused women can be driven to ********* by their own victimization. “This new report, by giving long overdue attention to the accounts of women serving prison sentences for *********—and the high rate at which these women report extreme levels of IPV in the year prior to their offenses—underscores the pressing need for comprehensive reform in this area. “It deserves urgent study from judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, law enforcement officers, correctional officials, and policymakers.” The women’s stories reflect lives lived in constant *****: “I was three days at the hospital because I lost my voice because he strangled me and my neck and throat was purple with bruises. And I couldn’t talk for three days,” reported one respondent. Another said, “He had us scared, both [my children] and me, that if I told anything to the police and they arrested him, he was going to get out and ***** us.” “As we approach the 30th anniversary of the ********* Against Women Act (VAWA) this month, this new study should embolden us to do more to prevent victimization and to help those who find themselves in abusive relationships,” said retired U.S. Representative Jackie Speier, who represented California’s 14th Congressional District until 2023. “The findings—while based in California—have broad national implications for how we treat some of the most vulnerable women in our communities. Our work is far from done.” Cory Booker, U.S. Senator from New Jersey, agreed: “This is an urgent report, and it is well timed as we mark the 30th anniversary of the ********* Against Women Act,” he said. “Most incarcerated women are survivors of ******* *********. We must do more as a society to prevent that ********* and to help the survivors. “Prisons cannot be substitutes for our failures to keep people safe. And for those who enter our prisons and jails, they must be places that do not compound trauma but help people heal from it. “I am proud that VAWA Reauthorization includes provisions to address the specific needs of incarcerated women, many of which are highlighted through the study’s stories of women incarcerated for ******* stemming from their histories of ******. There is a moral imperative to address the issues in this report. To fail to do so harms and implicates us all.” ‘Stark and troubling’ findings Nearly three-fourths of respondents reported experiencing IPV in the year before their offense took place, a rate that is 10 times higher than women in the ******* States, according to the report. Fatal Peril acknowledges that while IPV exists for people of all genders, the researchers focused on women given their disproportionate rates of severe and lethal intimate partner ******. The respondents recounted physical, psychological and ******* ******, including being hit, threatened with weapons, having partners who controlled all or most of their daily activities, and having to perform unwanted **** acts. Nearly a third of all respondents said that in the year before their offense, they had been strangled or choked more than once or felt dizzy, confused or blacked out after being choked—injuries that can cause a traumatic brain injury, according to the report. Among the 464 respondents who were experiencing IPV, two-thirds of them were in “extreme danger” of being ******* by their intimate partner, according to their Danger Assessment scores. It didn’t matter who was *******—stranger, intimate partner, child, family member, acquaintance, or friend—they all were at risk for intimate partner *********. The data suggests that the risk of being ******* due to IPV tragically extends to all of those around the survivor. About half of respondents believed they were treated unfairly at trial due to gender, *******, and socioeconomic bias, according to the report. “Respondents who experienced IPV were more likely to perceive gender and income bias compared to those who were not abused,” said Cimino. “Harmful courtroom stereotypes like being called masterminds, femme fatales, gang members, and bad mothers triggered beliefs about the survivor-defendants’ culpability.” “Our findings are stark and troubling, and have implications for the entire ********* legal system, from policing to parole,” Mukamal said. “It is particularly critical that the system considers the potential lethality of ****** suffered by these women and how traumatic brain injury from hits to the head and strangulation may affect survivor-defendants’ testimony and experiences in prison.” Recommendations and IPV prevention Kelly Savage-Rodriguez, who advocates for ending life-without-parole sentences through the California Coalition for Women Prisoners, said she “was not surprised by the findings” and was “grateful to see this new data being published.” “The results affirm my own experiences and those of too many others who have been criminalized for surviving ****** here in California and across the nation,” Savage-Rodriguez said. “These survivors need support, not long prison sentences.” The report makes recommendations for addressing the impact of IPV on survivor-defendants, including urging the ********* legal system to take measures to more consistently screen for IPV and to better take into account how traumatic brain injuries as a result of intimate partner ********* can affect survivor-defendants’ ability to remember and communicate details relating to their ****** and alleged *******. The study also calls for enhanced attention to programs and policies that can prevent IPV in the first place, including strengthening access to mental health and substance use treatment to address cumulative trauma for survivors, their children, and their partners. “Cross-sector collaboration between the ********* legal system, the domestic ********* response system, and child ******** systems are critical to ********* prevention,” said Cimino. The Regilla Project plans to convene a diverse set of stakeholders this Fall to identify concrete and viable legal and policy solutions to respond to the report’s findings. More information: Fatal Peril: This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Provided by Stanford University Citation: Report documents paths to prison for those experiencing intimate partner ********* (2024, September 5) retrieved 5 September 2024 from This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Report #documents #paths #prison #experiencing #intimate #partner #********* This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/118978-report-documents-paths-to-prison-for-those-experiencing-intimate-partner-violence/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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