Natalie J. Sokoloff and Susan C. Pearce,
"Locking up Hope: Immigration, Gender, and the Prison System"
(page 5 of 6)
Other Intersections: The Example of Domestic Violence in Immigrant
Communities
Even in cases where the immigrant man is the alleged perpetrator, a
woman can conceivably be caught up as a victim of the U.S. criminal
justice system. One of those situations involves domestic violence. In
addition to the fact that a history of abuse is one of the predictors of
women's incarceration, as mentioned above, an experience with such
violence can result in other potential involvements with the system.[55] The
decision about whether or not to report the abuse for a foreign-born
woman is a complex one.
First, a woman who is in an
uncertain legal status or whose immigration status is tied to that of
her husband face might have deep fears around deportation of herself or
her children if she approaches the police. The threat of deportation is
commonly used by abusers against their partners. Many women are not
familiar with the laws and rights related to domestic violence, which
may differ dramatically from their home countries. Although a growing
number of women are immigrating to the United States alone, a
substantial sector has come either as a dependent on a male partner's
visa or to marry a U.S. citizen through the increasingly popular
mail-order bride business. If these women are not yet proficient in the
English language and/or do not know the criminal legal system and their
rights, they may feel even more entrapped, to the point where they may
be risking theirs and their children's lives.
Second, even
if a woman's legal status is not an issue, the possibility of her
husband's entry into the criminal legal system can have a major impact
on her life and livelihood.[56] A recent case, for example, in which an
immigrant Chinese woman called the police to intervene in a domestic
dispute resulted in the incarceration of her husband; her intention was
to ask for police mediation, which is the role that police would play in
her home country. The subsequent incarceration of her family's main
breadwinner placed economic strains on her family, which intimidated
other immigrant women from following suit.[57] Anecdotes abound of women in
other immigrant communities who found themselves in similar
circumstances.
Third, a woman might risk her own
imprisonment in such cases. Some states have a dual-arrest policy, where
both parties in a domestic dispute are arrested. The victim risks being
misunderstood and inadequately defended in the U.S. courtroom. One
researcher observed a situation where a foreign-born domestic violence
victim's position got twisted into that of a perpetrator. This victim's
courtroom testimony about the abuse fell prey to a mistranslation, which
amounted to a confession of guilt on her part for the offense, without
her knowledge.[58]
Taking a gendered perspective on these
immigration-incarceration interfaces need not focus solely on the direct
relationship that women might have with the criminal legal system. The
post-9/11 surveillance and arrests of foreign-born men as part of the
"war on terror" are often husbands, sons, and fathers of immigrant
women—resulting in major disruptions in family income and stability.[59] A
key example was the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System
(NSEERS)—the 2002 "special registration" program the Bush administration
enacted, which required foreign-born men from particular Muslim
countries to register, submit to an interview, and be photographed and
fingerprinted. Widespread confusion resulted over the target communities
and requirements of this initiative. Thousands of registrants, believing
to be in voluntary compliance of the law, were subsequently rounded up
by the Department of Homeland Security: 2,870 were detained and another
13,799 were put into removal proceedings. The measure prompted mass
emigrations to countries like Canada, and had a major economic impact on
the Pakistani and Bangladeshi communities in New York.[60]
Learning From the Incarcerated Immigrant Woman
Further research and analysis into the presence of foreign-born women
in our jails and prisons could potentially offer a broader perspective
on the issues facing both incarcerated populations generally and
immigrant populations generally. How many other prisoners are
accidental victims of the system, through false arrests, misunderstood
courtroom testimony, or lack of knowledge of an increasingly complex set
of laws? How is the transportation of incarcerated women to locations
far from their homes—in special detention centers away from access to
community resources—a shared problem by many prisoners, increasingly
shipped to states other than their own? And what situations of
native-born imprisoned women mirror those of the asylum-seekers thrown
into cells with more serious criminals?
For example, a Sierra
Leonean woman detained in Wisconsin experienced severe cramping and
abdominal bleeding, a sympton she had suffered ever since she was forced
to undergo female genital mutilation as a teenager. Her requests for
medical care were frequently ignored. She also suffered from
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder due to the violence she witnessed during
her home country's civil war and a rape she survived while she was
living in the United States as a refugee. As a result, the woman
occasionally became agitated during her nearly three years in the jail.
ICE cited her outbursts as justification for housing her with violent
criminal inmates.[61]
Since migration policy and incarceration
of newcomers places the U.S. system more centrally in an international
spotlight regarding human rights questions, an exposure of the
experiences of detained immigrants might also shed light on the
treatment of the native-born in our prisons. Viewed from this
perspective, how is a "human right" (using international treaty
definitions) distinct from a "civil right" of citizens within a
situation of incarceration? Since a "civil" right is tied to
citizenship, non-citizen immigrants have a more restrictive set of
rights. For example, the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights requires that "[a]ll persons
deprived of their liberty shall be treated with humanity and with
respect for the inherent dignity of the human person."[62] Does such a
requirement have bearing on women stripped of headscarves, shackled
while pregnant, or placed in punitive prison environments for violating
an immigration law?
A significant and growing constituency
in the United States is subject to a set of laws that they have no voice
in making or changing. What avenues can be opened to allow the
non-citizen foreign-born to be represented in policy making? And how can
the specific voices and needs of women be brought to the table? By
virtue of their incarceration—including parents jailed for using a belt
to discipline their child, which is accepted in their home
cultures—future citizenship rights will be limited. In some states,
these prisoners have lost their voting rights for years, if not for
life. The popular historic American conception of a citizenry rooted in
immigrant communities is in jeopardy if part of that community is
disenfranchised and if the feeling of hope—which is a sustaining force
of immigrants—is eroded.
Immigrant women who have been
victims of violence must be able to tell their stories and be allowed
asylum without having to endure even greater violence in and by the
criminal legal system. In several studies with detainees at a number of
different prison facilities, there have been widespread allegations of
physical, sexual, and verbal abuse by corrections officers and other
correctional personnel.[63] In addition, inadequate medical and mental
health resources for women generally, and women with infant and small
children in particular, are documented in these same reports. Moreover,
the roundup and jailing of immigrant mothers who are at work, and their
removal to prisons far away from their children and their homes, is a
situation of terrible trauma all the way around. We must be aware of
both the immigrant and non-immigrant children whose mothers have been
ripped from their lives—sometimes without any notice and with tragic
consequences.[64]
Ironically, prisoners are now being used in jobs
where laws do not allow immigrants to perform the cheap labor that
immigrants have always done. For example, in Picacho, Arizona, claims
are made that U.S. farmers are using prison labor because of a lack of
immigrants: "With tightening restrictions on migrant workers, some
farmers are turning to the incarcerated."[65] This does not bode
well for either immigrants or native poor people who lack necessary jobs
in their home communities. Tragically, some of the very jobs that
prisoners perform while in prison have been sent overseas for cheaper
labor and are now coming back to U.S. prisons, as international labor
becomes more costly. Not only are these jobs not available in the
community leading to imprisonment, but when ex-offenders are released
back into the community, the jobs are still not there, but in the
prisons themselves! This vicious cycle is exacerbated when we add the
role of immigrants to the picture, as well as native-born poor people
and people of color.
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