Women as offenders – the social and legal circumstances of women who commit crimes: A case study of selected prisons in Malawi
Abstract
This study was conducted in three major prisons in Malawi (Zomba, Maula and Chichiri) between October
2003 and February 2004. It focused on establishing the social and legal circumstances that have shaped the
condition and position of the female offender. To do this it was necessary to understand and probe the system of
justice delivery and its accessibility to women who commit crimes. The research revealed that before women
are confronted with the law, they try to seek redress to their problems by consulting other informal structures of
justice delivery such as marriage counsellors and chiefs. This aspect and the testimonies of women themselves
brought to light a number of social impediments that determine the status quo for women offenders and the
trigger factors in the commission of crime.
The research has brought to light a number of socio-legal problems that women who have committed crime
face apart from the practical problems that they have in prisons. Poverty, gender, socio-cultural beliefs, illiteracy
and marriage relationships are pertinent issues in the woman offender’s story. Legally, the study has
established that there are many legal bottlenecks at different points of the criminal justice delivery system and
these affect women disproportionately more than men. It is thus imperative that a gender differentiated approach
should be used in processing women when they commit crime. The practical problems arising from
keeping women as offenders are influenced by the inherent structural problems that prisons have, the physical
needs of women stemming from their sex and gender and the failure of the prison system to address the problems
in a gender sensitive manner.
There are a number of important recommendations
Additional Notes
Submitted in partial fulfilment for the Masters Degree in Women’s Law,
Southern and Eastern African Regional Centre for Women’s Law, University of Zimbabwe, 2004