Support the Ms. Women in Prison and Domestic Violence Shelters program this holiday season!
Help send Ms. magazine to women in prisons and domestic violence shelters.
Dear John,
Out of sight should not mean out of mind – and heart. But the tragedy for women in prison is that it often does. For the rest of us, this invisibility keeps us from realizing how much women in prison may resemble you and me:
80 percent are mothers, and this year alone, incarceration will separate 2.3 million mothers from their children.
Most women in prison are not a danger to society. About 82 percent have been convicted of non-violent crimes. Often, they are suffering unfairly harsh consequences even for nonviolent crimes; for example, possessing or selling illegal drugs. Even many of the women convicted of murder have actually killed a violent partner in self-defense, yet not been allowed to plead self-defense.
Yet women and girls are the fastest growing incarcerated population in the United States today. Over the course of the past four decades, women’s state prison populations have grown more than 834 percent—more than doubling the rate of growth in men’s prisons. And the incarceration rates for women of color outpace their white counterparts: black women are twice as likely as white women to be incarcerated.
We at Ms. magazine want women in prison to know they are seen and valued. Because domestic violence shelters can be almost as isolating as prisons – and often lack libraries or any reading material, just as many prisons do – we decided to include women in those shelters too.
That’s why we started the Ms. magazine Prison and Domestic Violence Shelter Program. Now, we're reaching 8,242 federal, state and county prisoners and women in hundreds of shelters with Ms. That’s a fraction of the total, but it’s a number we’re proud of and hope to keep growing.
It is funded by charitable contributions earmarked for this purpose, and also by Ms. community members who buy an extra membership for a friend they don’t know.
Please make a tax-deductible contribution to the Ms. Prison and Domestic Violence Shelter Program. Let women on the inside know they are not alone. And let survivors of domestic violence who are now in shelters know it’s unfair for them to be deprived of home while the criminal is free.
On the outside, the women’s movement brings us support, facts, creativity, humor and a sense of community. Pass it on.
In friendship,
Gloria Steinem
Invite your loved ones and feminist friends to join the exciting and growing Ms. community. For as little as $25, they will receive a year of Ms. in the format that fits their lives—print, digital access or both! This is not the time for feminists to sit on the sidelines—and heading into 2020, independent journalism like Ms. is needed to keep feminists everywhere informed and empowered to fight back. But we can’t do it without your support!
We depend on our readers to share Ms. with their friends and family. So this holiday season, why not share the gift of Ms.?
This Week's Must-Reads from Ms.
This Holiday Season, You Can Send Cards to Incarcerated Survivors
"Two weeks ago, I spent most of the day writing cards to people I’ve never met—and these messages felt as special as any that I’ve ever written. That’s because they were for some of the most marginalized people in society: incarcerated survivors of rape."
Incarcerated People Deserve the Dignity of Menstrual Equity
"Along with many of the women I was incarcerated with, I used my own homemade products rather than beg for more from an unconcerned correctional officer or risk bleeding through my clothes. As a result of my creativity to survive with some modicum of dignity, I ended up needing a hysterectomy when I got home."
Pregnant Women in North Carolina Prisons are Being Kept in Solitary Confinement
The use of solitary confinement for incarcerated pregnant people is an indefensible and cruel practice. Unfortunately, it’s more common than you might think.
How Cash Bail Hurts Poor Women—and What We Can Do About It
Women are the least likely to be able to pay cash bail when they are arrested, because they are at the bottom of the economic totem pole—and because they are usually the primary caregivers of their children, putting them in an impossible position. Feed your kids or stay in jail.
Showing Solidarity with Women in Prison
As the 2020 candidates have begun to roll out criminal justice reform proposals, we cannot forget the 231,000 women currently incarcerated in the United States.
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