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Women's Health, Incarcerated. (WHInc.)

Education Podcasts

The incarceration rate of women has exponentially increased in the past few decades. Gender discrimination in the U.S. legal system and its impacts on health are highly prevalent. And yet, we don’t talk about it. Women’s Health, Incarcerated. aims to raise awareness on and discuss potential solutions to these injustices, informed by researchers, activists, and organizers. Join Bhavana and Vennela as they interview experts and individuals with lived experiences and provide insight on the public health crisis that is our current incarceration system. Visit www.whincthemovement.org for more.

Location:

United States

Description:

The incarceration rate of women has exponentially increased in the past few decades. Gender discrimination in the U.S. legal system and its impacts on health are highly prevalent. And yet, we don’t talk about it. Women’s Health, Incarcerated. aims to raise awareness on and discuss potential solutions to these injustices, informed by researchers, activists, and organizers. Join Bhavana and Vennela as they interview experts and individuals with lived experiences and provide insight on the public health crisis that is our current incarceration system. Visit www.whincthemovement.org for more.

Language:

English


Episodes
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IGNITE: A transformative approach to providing education in jail

10/5/2022
Percy describes IGNITE as a cultural change…and after hearing more about it, we have to say that we agree with him. Based out of Genesee County Jail in Michigan, IGNITE is a program that offers extensive educational opportunities to incarcerated individuals. IGNITE is steadfast in its belief that education is the key to reducing recidivism and combating generational incarceration. People in the program are given time to explore a wide variety of careers, partake in group seminars addressing...

Duration:00:35:48

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8. Incarceration: The Time Lost

6/30/2021
While carceral settings are often branded as places of reform, individuals who experience incarceration in America often reflect on how so much of their time in this punitive environment is spent waiting: waiting for helpful services, waiting for educational resources, waiting for guidance and support. Those who do find ways to grow are often the exception to the norm. For our season 2 finale, we are joined by Ashley Goldon, a current DSW candidate and the Statewide Program Director of...
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7. Incarcerated While Innocent

6/16/2021
America’s criminal legal system disproportionately traps individuals who don’t have access to many resources and come from lower-income backgrounds. With exorbitantly high bails and minimal legal aid, thousands of individuals are detained in jail just awaiting their trial. This is not news to Eileen Maher, an activist working with Vocal New York and the Justice for Women Taskforce. She is also a criminalized survivor of domestic violence and spent over two years incarcerated at Rikers,...
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6. Coming Home

6/2/2021
Tashoy Miller is an entrepreneur and an activist. Through her growing business, Ground Up, she hopes to assist formerly incarcerated individuals with reentry and navigating the job market. Tash herself was incarcerated in a Mississippi jail three years ago. We sat down with her to learn more about her experience with reentry after being incarcerated in a state far from her home. Tash describes the difficulty of balancing parole and probation regulations while job hunting without any systemic...
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5. The Impacts of Incarceration on LGBTQI Individuals

5/20/2021
LGBTQI individuals, and more specifically LGBTQI people of color, are overrepresented in the U.S. criminal legal system. Why? And how does incarceration impact the health of people in this community specifically? For today’s episode, we delve into these issues by laying out a few facts and stats and speaking with expert Bradley Brockmann, a civil rights attorney and Assistant Professor at Brown University School of Public Health. Join us as we explore the experiences of individuals who...
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4. Growing Up Behind Bars

4/28/2021
LaWanda Hollister is an incoming college student and a chef who aspires to start her own food truck business. She was also incarcerated for 34 years. Today, we speak with her about the experience of entering prison as a teenager and leaving as an adult, and how one’s physical and mental health is affected by decades of being incarcerated with inaccessible healthcare. We also get a glimpse into what the COVID-19 pandemic was like behind bars. Join us as we get to know LaWanda and better learn...
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3. Contradictions of Care and Confinement

4/14/2021
Incarcerated individuals gain the constitutional right to health care just as most of their other rights are taken away from them. This episode, we’re joined with Dr. Carolyn Sufrin, a medical anthropologist and OB/GYN, to unpack what this means. Tune in as we break down the concept of “jailcare,” a term used to describe many of the contradictions found in the criminal legal system, explore the implications mass incarceration has on reproductive justice, and discuss the responsibility that a...
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2. Recovery, Reunification, and Resilience: Kayla's Story

3/31/2021
Kayla Mach was formerly incarcerated at Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility. This episode follows her journey of substance use recovery and heartbreaking separation from her daughters. She is now dedicated to using various platforms to advocate for and uplift other system-impacted individuals. Be sure to tune in as we reflect on her experiences with faith-based programming and with reentry, and explore the concept of accountability. For more information on today’s episode, visit...
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1. Labor and Delivery while Incarcerated

3/17/2021
What is labor and delivery like for an incarcerated pregnant person? Is she shackled? Does she get to hold her baby? Today, we are joined by Dr. Deborah Landis Lewis, an OB/GYN and liaison between the women's prison in Michigan and the birthing hospital. Dr. Landis Lewis shares her expertise on what pregnancy care, labor, delivery, and the postpartum period look like for incarcerated patients. Tune in as we discuss various barriers that prevent incarcerated women from receiving the standard...
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Women's Health, Incarcerated: Season 2 Trailer

3/10/2021
Women's Health, Inc. (WHInc.) is back with another season. Tune in March 17, 2021 for our first episode. Music by Fesliyan Studios.
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12. COVID-19 in Jails and Prisons, part 2

9/23/2020
Incarceration is isolation. And amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, folks are more isolated than ever--having minimal interactions with their loved ones and even with legal representation. Today, Somil Trivedi continues to shed light on the sparse and ineffective public health precautions correctional facilities have taken to combat COVID-19 and what measures should be taken. Join us in our conversation to learn more about what we all can be doing on an individual level to advocate for...

Duration:00:22:05

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11. COVID-19 in Jails and Prisons, part 1

9/16/2020
This week we’re joined by Somil Trivedi, a senior staff attorney from the ACLU, who shares his insight and experiences working to mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in jails and prisons. With the pandemic in mind, we discuss the role that various stakeholders play in the criminal legal system, the responses we’ve been seeing in jails versus prisons, and how these issues speak to societal problems at large. For more information on the sources for today’s episode, visit...
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10. State Violence Against Black Women, part 2

9/9/2020
Content Warning: This episode contains discussions of violence, racism, and sexual violence. This week, we continue our conversation with Professor Michelle S. Jacobs to delve further into the ways in which state violence is committed against Black women and federal policy designed to protect survivors of domestic violence actually discriminates against Black women. Professor Jacobs goes on to describe how police violence translates into carceral violence and shares the value of thinking...

Duration:00:37:19

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9. State Violence Against Black Women, part 1

9/2/2020
Content Warning: This episode contains discussions of violence, racism, and sexual violence. Michelle S. Jacobs, a Professor of Law at the University of Florida, walks us through the layered nature of violence and oppression against Black women in America. During our conversation, we reckon with the fact that police killings of Black women rarely make headlines. To explain why Black women are often left out of racial discourse, Professor Jacobs unpacks the roles and stereotypes that have...

Duration:00:26:43

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8. The Trauma Inside: Pregnancy in Prison

8/26/2020
Content Warning: This episode will contain discussion of trauma-related events and impacts including sexual assault, interpersonal or domestic violence, grief, and loss. Today, Jacqueline Williams continues to share her expertise with us regarding carceral trauma. The conversation is centered on the carceral trauma pregnant women experience and the immense impact this has on both the health of the mother as well as that of the baby. Jacqueline also talks us through the critical legislative...
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7. The Trauma-to-Prison Pipeline

8/20/2020
Content Warning: This episode will contain discussion of trauma-related events and impacts including sexual assault, interpersonal or domestic violence, grief, and loss. This week we invited the cofounder of the Michigan Prison Doula Initiative and a current Program Associate at the Michigan Criminal Justice Program of the American Friends Service Committee to speak with us about various forms of pre-carceral trauma individuals may experience, specifically interpersonal and structural...

Duration:00:24:32

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6: Conversations with Asia: Womanhood in Prison

8/5/2020
Content Warning: This episode discusses issues related to sexual assault, abuse, and violence. This week we continue our conversation with Asia Johnson as she shares her experiences reentering society and the opportunities she sought out that inspired and shaped her mission of working towards ending mass incarceration. From domestic violence and sexism to prison programming, Asia talks us through some of her personal experiences navigating incarceration as a woman and provides her...

Duration:00:30:37

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5. Conversations with Asia: Navigating Mental Health in the System

7/29/2020
Content Warning: This episode discusses issues of trauma, sexual assault, violence, depression, and death. Our guest today is a filmmaker, essayist, poet, activist, and student, and has been formerly incarcerated. Asia Johnson speaks on pre-carceral trauma, navigating mental health behind bars, transitioning from jail to a hospital, hospital to a prison, and prison to the outside, all without adequate resources and in a debilitating environment. Join us as Asia shares her journey of growth...

Duration:00:21:01

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4. Periods Behind Bars: The Impacts of Social Control

7/22/2020
Content Warning: This episode discusses issues related to sexual assault, abuse, and violence. Our entire carceral state is a mechanism of social control -- a way for those in power to abuse norms, sanctions, and laws to marginalize individuals. In our criminal legal system, the menstrual experience is a microcosm of social control, and the lack of access to menstrual products only reinforces these power structures. People who menstruate are stripped of their autonomy and are vulnerable to...

Duration:00:20:04

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3. Periods Behind Bars: Accessibility and Physical Health Effects

7/15/2020
Menstrual hygiene products are not free in jails and prisons across America. Policies regarding this issue are quite minimal--only recently, in 2018, did federal legislation addressing this get passed. But even then, the First Step Act only offers free menstrual products for those in federal prisons, meaning that 95% of women and girls who are incarcerated aren’t covered. In this episode, we discuss the lack of accessibility of menstrual hygiene products and the physical impacts this can...

Duration:00:22:52