Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
For Girls, Sexual Abuse Is the Prison Pipeline
For Girls, Sexual Abuse Is the Prison Pipeline
Jan 29, 2026 7:51 AM

The current debate surrounding overcriminalization and juvenile incarceration is often centered around the male prison population. The debate increasingly overlooks the problems that face young girls caught in the prison pipeline to juvenile detention. New data in the past several years has shown that the prison pipeline for girls often includes a pattern of sexual abuse that is not present in cases involving male delinquents.

A 2015 report published by Georgetown Law’s Center on Poverty and Inequality found that girls in juvenile detention have a high likelihood of being sexual and physical abuse victims. The reports summarizes new data on the ‘abuse to prison pipeline’ present in the female juvenile justice system. The report found that there is systemic criminalization of victimized girls, often disproportionately girls from minority populations.

Sexual violence against girls is a modern American tragedy, and this sexual abuse is a primary predictor today of a girl’s entrance into a juvenile detention center. Girls that were victims of sex trafficking are often arrested on prostitution charges and put in detention centers to be punished instead of being helped to e the trauma of the sex trafficking industry. Ethnic minority girls are increasingly being incarcerated as a result.

For example, African American girls make up 14 percent of the national population and 33 percent of girls detained mitted. Native American, African American, and Hispanic girls have the highest likelihood of being incarcerated among young women. Girls in the juvenile justice system are overwhelming likely to have been victims of sexual or physical abuse – one study cited found that in 93 percent of girls in Oregon’s juvenile detention centers had experience some type of abuse, 76 percent had been abused by the age of 13. According the Georgetown report, a California study in 1998 found that 81 percent of incarcerated girls had been physically or sexually abused. While the results vary greatly in different states the numbers in many states are alarmingly high. Compared to males, the report found that incarcerated girls are 4 times more likely than boys to have experienced abuse.

One of the biggest problems with incarcerating these girls is the juvenile justice system’s woefully inadequate resources for providing the support and treatment many of these girls need, and often exacerbates the trauma they have already experienced. Abused girls need emotional and spiritual counseling. Instead of the getting the help they need, incarcerated girls e trapped in a cycle of abuse and trauma, reaction from trauma that lands them in detention centers, more trauma from incarceration, release, and then possible rearrest. Girls that are incarcerated at a young age have a higher chance of mental health problems (80 percent) than boys (67 percent).

Community transformation, families, and the work of munities, law enforcement, and churches putting an end to sexual abuse and sex trafficking will do more to end the abuse to prison cycle than adding more money to the welfare programs and juvenile detention programs that are at the epicenter of the problem. The solutions need e at the root of the problem not at the aftereffects. While a two-parent, morally virtuous family is the best defense against female juvenile incarceration, where that breaks down the church and other faith-based institutions can have a profoundly preventative and restorative role to play when citizens are willing to sacrificially protect girls from the cycles of abuse, neglect, and trauma.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Supreme Court smacks down liberal double standard on free speech
Last week the Supreme Court struck down a Minnesota law that banned voters from going to the polls while wearing T-shirts, buttons and similar items containing politically charged messages. On the surface the issue may seem to be a trivial matter—at best a minor win for self-expression. But the court ruling was major victory against the double standards of the political left. As I wrote back in March, the case ofMinnesota Voters Alliance v. Manskyconcerned a Minnesota statute that broadly...
Berkeley’s ‘mass extinction’ scare just more Malthusian mythology
Too often, environmentalists seem to see humans as a cancer mutilating the earth’s natural splendor, but the idea that fewer people is the solution to the earth’s woes ignores the incredible creative capacity inherent in the human mind. On June 12th, the Berkeley City Council unanimously voted to declare a state of “climate emergency.” The resolution, introduced by Council Member Cheryl Davila, calls for California governments to “initiate a just local, state, national, and global climate emergency mobilization to restore...
The shrinking of the administrative state
In just the last year, the regulatory apparatus of the federal government has endured a range of healthy threats and corrections. Approximately1,579 regulatory actions have been withdrawn or delayed, according to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, and that wave is set to continue. “Agencies plan to finalize three deregulatory actions for every new regulatory action” this fiscal year, a recent report noted. “We’re here today for one single reason,” said President Trump said last December, holding a pair...
The overdue good news Juneteenth
Although bad news travels fast, good news often takes the scenic route. That appears to have been especially true during the Civil War. Although Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation became official on the first day of January 1863, word didn’t arrive in Texas until June 19, 1865. On that day Union soldiers, led by Major General Gordon Granger, landed in Galveston with news that the war had ended and that those who were once enslaved were now free. One of Granger’s first...
Introducing The Good Society
Frequent visitors to this blog know that the Acton Institute is rooted in a mission to promote a free and virtuous society characterized by individual liberty and sustained by religious principles. Over the years, our visitors and supporters have begged for an easy way to share this mission and Acton’s core teachings. Last week, our email subscribers got the first look at our newest short film series meeting that need: the inaugural six episodes of The Good Society. The Good...
A Samson Option for Ireland’s Catholic hospitals?
National funding of health care has produced a fresh crisis in Europe. Not merely the never-ending “winter crisis” in the NHS each year, but a crisis of conscience for Catholic health care providers. The Republic of Ireland voted overwhelmingly to repeal the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution, recognizing the unborn child’s inalienable right to life. With alarming speed, abortion has gone from illegal to mandatory. According to the (UK) Catholic Herald: Ireland’s Taoiseach [Prime Minister] has said that hospitals with...
Incredibles 2: Making superheroes great again
I saw Incredibles 2 over the Father’s Day weekend, and just like its predecessor, there’s a lot to ponder beneath the surface of this animated film. In the real world we’ve had to wait 14 years, but the sequel picks up basically where the original left off. As the Rev. Jerry Zandstra wrote of the original, “litigiousness and mediocrity are some of the biggest obstacles in our culture. The propensity to settle every dispute by legal action undermines values, such...
Video: Rev. Ben Johnson on First Things blaming democracy and capitalism for abortion
Rev. Ben Johnson, editor of the Acton Institute Religion & Liberty Transatlantic project, appears on the Stephen Herreid Show on YouTube to talk about his critique of First Things editor Matt Schmitz’s essay which blamed democracy and capitalism for Ireland’s repeal by referendum of its 8th Amendment, which “recognizes the equal right to life of the pregnant woman and the unborn.” Latest news here. Read Johnson’s Acton June 8 blog post: ‘Satanic’ capitalism brought abortion to Ireland: ‘First Things’ editor...
Is the gig economy really reshaping our work?
We continue to hear doomsday prophecies about the future of work, with much of the fear focused on the recent growth of the so-called “gig economy”—a swirling sphere of temporary, flexible, and increasingly independent work. Epitomized by services like Uber and Airbnb, and scattered across a wider variety of independent and web-based work, the expansion of the gig economy has caused many to ponder whether its rise might mean the end of traditional long-term employment and a gloomy future of...
The Solow model and ideas
Note: This is post #84 in a weekly video series on basic economics. According to previous videos in this series, the Solow model seems to predict that we’ll always end up in a steady state with no economic growth. But, the Solow model still has one variable unaccounted for: ideas. Ideas do one thing really well, says Alex Tabarrok of Marginal Revolution University, they give us more bang for our buck. This means we get more output for the same...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved