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Erika Kates News



  • Senior Scholar Erika Kates, Ph.D., writes a letter to the editor about the negative ways that women with substance use disorders are impacted by incarceration and the need for more family-focused recovery centers and informed probation practices.

  • Erika Kates, Ph.D., of WCW discusses the U.S. bail system in the the New York Times.


  • Erika Kates of WCW is mentioned in this article that touches upon female incarceration. 

  • Dr. Erika Kates of WCW is mentioned in this article about justice for women in prison.
  • Response: Why Are So Many Black Women Dying of AIDS?

    By Erika Kates, Ph.D.

    Erika Kates, Ph.D. responds to the op-ed,  by Laurie Shrage, which appeared in the New York Times on December 11, 2015:

    Drawing on 2004 data, Laurie Shrage states that HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death for black women between the ages of 25 and 34. Shrage links the spike in HIV infections in women to the mass incarceration of black men who are the most likely partners of these women. Consequently, her policy suggestions include straightforward measures to reduce the skyrocketing population of incarcerated black men and improved enforcement of the Prison Rape Elimination Act. However, some epidemiologists are critical of the ‘hierarchical’ method of defining risk -- checking off a list of factors (e.g., men to men sex; drug use) in declining order of importance -- because they have learned that contributing factors overlap and are intertwined.


  • Erika Kates of WCW is referenced in this article about the incarceration of women.
  • Q & A with Erika Kates, Ph.D.: Building a Women's Justice Network in Massachusetts

    Research & Action Report Spring/Summer 2014

    ÆÞÓÑÉçÇø (WCW) maintains a strong legacy of research that can accelerate social change. Building on that, Kates teaches and practices participatory research—which is research that actively involves multiple groups of stakeholders on the issues being examined. Whenever possible, she includes representatives of the low-income women she’s studying.

    The Massachusetts Women’s Justice Network mentioned in this interview is comprised of researchers; state legislators and/or their aides; personnel from the Department of Corrections and the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security; representatives of the Department of Public Health (which administers the state’s substance abuse services); the Office of Probation and Community Corrections; women’s commissions; women’s shelters; the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other advocacy groups; and formerly incarcerated women.


  • Boston Magazine, February 6, 2014
    Jean Trounstine

  • Criminal justice reform at pre-trial stage discussed at public meeting 11/13

    For Immediate Release: November 7, 2013


  • Women’s eNews, January 19, 2013
    WeNews staff

  • For women convicts, state needs better alternatives to jail

    by Erika Kates, Ph.D.
    The Boston Globe
    April 10, 2012

    Yvonne Abraham's column provides a succinct summary of the key arguments for reducing our prison population: saving money, reducing recidivism, and diverting people to appropriate mental health and substance abuse treatment programs (“Correcting corrections,’’ Metro, April 5).

    These arguments are especially compelling when it comes to incarcerated women. Almost two-thirds of the women sentenced to our state prison are diagnosed with mental illness (compared to a just over a quarter of male inmates) and many also have substance abuse diagnoses. The data show 85 percent of women’s offenses are non-violent and are predominantly related to their mental illnesses and addictions.


  • bostonglobe The Boston Globe April 10, 2012
    Erika Kates
  • Q&A with Erika Kates: A New Staff Partnership Studies Justice for Victims, Justice for Offenders, and Economic Justice

    Erika Kates, who recently joined the ÆÞÓÑÉçÇø (WCW) as a senior research scientist, previously served as research director at the Center for Women in Politics and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Her fields of most extensive experience include women in prison and the effect on women of the intersecting policies of welfare, workforce development, and higher education. She has published extensively, especially on the latter subject. The Educational Development Center recently included her in a book featuring 20 people who have made significant contributions to gender equity in education.

  • Erika Kates, Ph.D., Joins ÆÞÓÑÉçÇø as Senior Research Scientist

    March 1, 2008

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