By Mirko Bagaric, Deakin University.
When it comes to committing crimes, humans have two distinct forms. Overwhelmingly, men perform most criminal acts. And, with only a hint of exaggeration, women never commit the most heinous offences.
As such, it is an egregious public policy disfigurement that all Australian jurisdictions have expansive and expensive prisons that are purpose built for imprisoning the portion of the community that nearly none of us fear. Worse still is that female incarceration numbers are at record highs and increasing.
Numbers don’t lie
Women constitute approximately 8% of all Australian prisoners. However, the total number of women prisoners has grown considerably over the past decade.
In 2005 there were 1734 women prisoners, which amounted to 6.8% of all prisoners. In June 2015, the total number of prisoners in Australia was 35,949 – of whom 2825 were women. This amounts to 7.6% of the total prison population.
As women are less responsible for criminal law offences, they are inevitably imprisoned less than men. But the level of female under-representation in overall imprisonment rates is not nearly enough. It should be somewhere between 0% and 1% of the total prison population.
Women comprise one-fifth of all defendants who appear in Australian criminal courts. When it comes to the more serious forms of crime, female involvement drops considerably. Women comprise slightly less than 13% of defendants in the higher courts.
Women are even less represented in relation to the most serious offences. They commit virtually no sexual offences. Women constitute 15% of all defendants whose most serious crime is homicide or a related offence. However, the number of women charged with such offences is low given that only 955 such offences are reported annually.