Imagine being punished for the abuse you’ve endured. For women who are survivors of domestic abuse and find themselves caught in the criminal justice system, this is their reality. In my work at Women in Prison, a national charity working to end the harm of the justice system on women’s lives, sadly I hear such stories on a regular basis.
A service manager in our Manchester women’s centre recently told me her probation caseload includes 23 women, 20 of whom have experienced domestic abuse. This isn’t an anomaly. It’s the norm.
The link between domestic abuse and women’s involvement in the criminal justice system is stark, yet it remains overlooked and misunderstood, leaving survivors caught in a cycle of abuse and punishment. Or if they’re able to break that cycle, they’ve lost so much they have to rebuild their lives from the ground up.
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Far too often, women are criminalised for actions stemming directly from their abuse. Coerced into offending, acting in self-defence, or facing malicious accusations as part of a pattern of coercive control, survivors are seen as perpetrators rather than victims.
Elizabeth (not her real name) shared her experience with me: “My boyfriend was a drug dealer who abused me financially, sexually, emotionally, and physically. When we’d go out, he’d say, ‘You’re carrying the drugs.’ I was scared to say no. I was arrested and given a custodial sentence. I don’t ever want to see women going to prison after experiencing what I went through.”
Sadly, Elizabeth’s experience is all too common. Three in five women in prison report being survivors of domestic abuse. Research shows that women’s offending is often tied to experiences of abuse and coercion. The landmark Corston Report which looked into women in the criminal justice system and was published 17 years ago, identified these connections. Yet, the criminal justice system has failed to act on this knowledge.