Consequently, special needs offenders are more inclined to reoffend in comparison to offenders who do not have special needs (Special needs, nd).
Women special needs offenders Upon analyzing current policies and practices for women special needs offenders, and the general knowledge that typically female offenders obtain psychological characteristics stemming from a variety of leading contributors consisting of physical abuse, trauma, mental illnesses, detrimental relationships, substance abuse, and parental concerns. Consequently as women offenders constitute 17% of the prison population today initially designed for male offenders, and the fact that previous public policies had continued to disregard the implications surrounding the lives of female offenders, and the manner in which they are punished unreasonably relevant to harm they inflict on society as it pertains to the war on drugs, resulting in female offenders becoming classified as gendered consequences receiving mandatory sentencing and longer periods of