Advertisment
HomeSocial Justice & ActivismThe System Isn’t Built For Us — Women On Probation Are Being...

The System Isn’t Built For Us — Women On Probation Are Being Left Behind

By Cultivating Justice

Across Connecticut, more than 32,000 people are on probation, yet the experiences of women—especially mothers, survivors of violence, young women, and pregnant people—are almost entirely missing from policy conversations.

As women with lived experience, we know probation is supposed to be an alternative to incarceration. But when rules, expectations, and supervision practices ignore the realities of women’s lives, we are set up to fail. And when we fail, we lose our children, our housing, our safety, and our stability.

That’s why Cultivating Justice’s F.R.E.E. CT Campaign is calling on women, families, allies, and community members to come together and demand a probation system that works for women—not against.

What Women Face Under Probation

Trauma & mental health needs go unsupported. Most justice-involved women carry deep histories of trauma, including domestic violence, childhood abuse, and sexual assault. Yet probation responses are often punitive rather than trauma-informed, ignoring how trauma impacts compliance and decision-making.

Programs built for men. Most reentry and supervision programs were designed around men’s needs, even though research shows women experience reentry differently and require gender-responsive supports. Without mental health care, trauma treatment, childcare, transportation help, and coordinated services, many women struggle to stabilize.

Mothers and pregnant people face impossible barriers. Probation rarely accounts for prenatal care, childcare responsibilities, breastfeeding, custody arrangements, or transportation. A missed appointment or lack of childcare becomes a violation, not a reflection of unmet needs. Women don’t lose their kids because they’re unfit—they lose them because the system refuses to support them.

Housing instability that makes compliance nearly impossible. Women on probation face high rates of homelessness and often rely on unsafe partners or family members. This increases risk of abuse and system involvement—harms probation does not prevent or recognize.

Racial disparities that compound every barrier. Black and Latina women are disproportionately represented in Connecticut’s caracal system, facing harsher consequences for violations and fewer supports. These challenges mirror national findings: inconsistent, male-modeled supervision and lack of gender-responsive services leave women without the support they need (The Future of Probation for Women, Clinks).

Probation Reform Is a Women’s Issue

HB 6361 would eliminate incarceration for non-criminal technical violations, reduce excessive supervision terms, remove harmful fees, and shift probation toward support—not surveillance. For women, these changes are about safety, stability, and survival.

Join Us

F.R.E.E. CT! Greater Hartford Meeting: December 17 • 6–8 PM
Elmwood Community Center, West Hartford

Women deserve safety, fairness, and dignity. Together, we’re building a system that finally sees us—and hears us.

Alex Brown, Cultivating Justice Leader

References

  • (2023). The future of probation for women: A gender-responsive approach to supporting women in contact with the criminal justice system. https://www.clinks.org
  • National Institute of Justice. (n.d.). Women’s reentry programs rated promising on CrimeSolutions.gov. (Referenced for gender-responsive programming evidence.)
  • Office of Justice Programs. (n.d.). Five things we know about women and reentry. U.S.
  • Department of Justice. https://ojp.gov (Referenced for statistics on women’s reentry needs, trauma, and distinct pathways.)
  • Hubbard, T. (n.d.). Gender-responsive supervision practices. (Referenced for lessons on women’s supervision needs and gender-informed approaches.)
  • S. Department of Justice. (n.d.). Research on gender-responsive programming. (Referenced for trauma-informed interventions, recidivism impact, and evidence-based practices.)

Photo by RDNE Stock project: https://www.pexels.com/photo/person-in-orange-shirt-leaning-on-steel-bars-6065073/

You may also be interested in

Read the latest edition

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

More by this author

Why Simple Daily Habits Matter More Than Big Health Resolutions

Most people don’t set out to ignore their health. It usually slips down the list somewhere between the morning alarm and the last email...

5 Trends in Heart Health Among Younger Adults: Why Your CoQ10 Level Matters

By Doctors Best Heart disease is something many adults push to the back of their minds if they are not experiencing symptoms; a concern for...

Ban the Box on Basic Human Needs: Food Security for People with Probation Violations

By Diana Martine, Chicks Ahoy Farm, Inc. Chicks Ahoy Farm Inc is a community-based organization working toward systemic change, from local towns and cities to...