Regilla Project: Women Incarcerated for Killing their Abusers (809F)

Nearly 1200 people are incarcerated in female correctional facilities in California and are serving lengthy sentences for murder and manslaughter convictions. It is not known in California (or in any other state) how many of these individuals are incarcerated for crimes that directly relate to histories of intimate partner violence. The Stanford Criminal Justice Center, through its Regilla Project, is attempting to assess this frequency. During Summer 2023, the Stanford Criminal Justice Center undertook data collection at the larger of the two women’s prisons in California. The surveys were completed by individuals who have murder and manslaughter convictions to assess how their convictions were related to intimate partner violence. Nearly 500 individuals completed the survey during July 2023. Students enrolled in the policy lab will code the narrative portions of the survey responses (not everyone who participated in the surveys completed a narrative portion), analyze the quantitative data collected through the surveys, and assist in drafting a report for researchers, policymakers and practitioners aimed to better understand the nature of who is incarcerated and what their needs are, and to suggest front-end policy reforms.

Application process: Interested students should submit a Consent of Instructor form with a copy of their resume, transcript, and statement of interest to Debbie Mukamal (dmukamal@law.stanford.edu) by September 11, 2023 at 5:00 pm. The statement of interest should indicate relevant expertise, including whether the student has any data analysis experience (quantitative and/or qualitative) as well as the type of software the student has used in such data analysis.

Elements used in grading: Attendance, Performance, Class Participation, Written Assignments, Final Paper.

Important note: Admitted students may enroll for three units. Four units is limited to one or two students with consent of the instructors.

Course Catalogue
Consent of Instructor – Application Portal

Instructors

Reports & Deliverables

FATAL PERIL report cover

Fatal Peril: Unheard Stories from the IPV-to-Prison Pipeline and Other Stories Touched by Violence

Read the Report

In the News

Who Gets to Kill in Self-Defense?

The Stanford Criminal Justice Center report, “Fatal Peril: Unheard Stories from the IPV-to-Prison Pipeline”, was featured and Debbie Mukamal was quoted by The New York Times in “Who Gets to […]

In the Courts

Stanford Criminal Justice Center‘s report, Fatal Peril, was cited and relied upon in Justice Liu’s concurring opinion today in People v. Collins, which provides important new guidance for cases in which women are prosecuted for failing to protect their children from an abusive husband or partner.

Full Opinion