Women’s Health, Incarcerated. (WHInc.)
Education
LaWanda Hollister is an incoming college student and a chef who aspires to start her own food truck business. She was also incarcerated for 34 years. Today, we speak with her about the experience of entering prison as a teenager and leaving as an adult, and how one’s physical and mental health is affected by decades of being incarcerated with inaccessible healthcare. We also get a glimpse into what the COVID-19 pandemic was like behind bars. Join us as we get to know LaWanda and better learn the realities of the long-lasting impacts of growing up inside. For more information on today’s episode, visit www.whincthemovement.org. Music in this episode by Blue Dot Sessions and Fesliyan Studios.
IGNITE: A transformative approach to providing education in jail
8. Incarceration: The Time Lost
7. Incarcerated While Innocent
6. Coming Home
5. The Impacts of Incarceration on LGBTQI Individuals
3. Contradictions of Care and Confinement
2. Recovery, Reunification, and Resilience: Kayla's Story
1. Labor and Delivery while Incarcerated
Women's Health, Incarcerated: Season 2 Trailer
12. COVID-19 in Jails and Prisons, part 2
11. COVID-19 in Jails and Prisons, part 1
10. State Violence Against Black Women, part 2
9. State Violence Against Black Women, part 1
8. The Trauma Inside: Pregnancy in Prison
7. The Trauma-to-Prison Pipeline
6: Conversations with Asia: Womanhood in Prison
5. Conversations with Asia: Navigating Mental Health in the System
4. Periods Behind Bars: The Impacts of Social Control
3. Periods Behind Bars: Accessibility and Physical Health Effects
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