Sponsor
The University of California Sentencing Project has received funding from the UCLA Office of Research and Creative Activities, UCLA Luskin Institute on Democracy and Inequality, UC San Diego School of Social Sciences Advancing Racial Justice Initiative, and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (grant No. G-2305-15694).
Published In
Social Sciences
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-26-2025
Abstract
The vast majority of people in U.S. women’s prisons are survivors of interpersonal violence, a pattern that organizers and advocates have referred to as the abuse-to-prison pipeline. This article critically examines criminal prosecution from the perspectives of survivors of interpersonal violence who faced long prison sentences in California. In-depth interviews and group discussions were generated through a participatory process at a gathering to launch the University of California Sentencing Project, a partnership with the community-based organization California Coalition for Women Prisoners. The twenty-two formerly incarcerated participants had collectively spent more than 300 years imprisoned. Drawing on their lived experiences spanning several decades and multiple jurisdictions, this article offers an unyielding account of tactics of isolation, intimidation, narrative manipulation, and confinement as definitional to prosecutorial practice and culture. This criminalized survivor-centered analysis of prosecution shows how one of the most robustly funded public interventions for interpersonal violence is not merely failing to protect victims but is protracting patterns of abuse and coercive control. Implications are discussed in terms of social care work and collective defense rooted in abolition feminism.
Rights
© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Locate the Document
DOI
10.3390/socsci14030184
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/43201
Citation Details
Jordan, S. P., Thuma, E., Birru, A. A., Wilson, D., Ralston, R., Cumpian, N., & Hankins, J. (2025). Disrupting the Abuse-Prison Nexus: The Gendered Violence of Prosecution and Abolitionist Feminist Approaches to Social Care Work. Social Sciences, 14(3), 184.

- Usage
- Downloads: 19
- Abstract Views: 8
- Captures
- Readers: 1
- Mentions
- Blog Mentions: 1
- News Mentions: 1