

The Women’s Justice Commission is a multi-year research, policy, and communications initiative that documents and raises awareness of the unique challenges facing women in the justice system and builds consensus for evidence-based reforms that enhance safety, health, and justice. The project spans the full scope of the adult justice system—from arrest and diversion through prosecution, incarceration, release, and community supervision—with a particular focus on trauma-informed and gender-responsive prevention and intervention strategies.
Publications

Event Recording: Policing Domestic Violence: Past, Present, and Future
The Council on Criminal Justice’s Women’s Justice Commission and a panel of experts examined the complex impact of domestic violence policing and explored promising strategies to improve safety, accountability, and justice for women.

Meeting Bulletin #4: March 2025
The commission’s fourth meeting focused on the impact of fines, fees, and sentencing on justice-involved women, marking the end of deliberations on front-end criminal justice system issues.

Meeting Bulletin #3: January 2025
For its third convening, the Women’s Justice Commission gathered in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and focused on women’s needs, experiences, and outcomes as they move through the criminal court system pretrial.

Event Summary: Domestic Violence – Understanding the Data and Policy
On October 23, 2024, the Council on Criminal Justice hosted a live webinar on domestic violence and women’s justice involvement with experts from CCJ’s Women’s Justice Commission (WJC) and Crime Trends Working Group (CTWG).

Meeting Bulletin #2: August 2024
During its second meeting, the commission examined policing as a possible intervention point for justice-involved women, focusing on the efficacy of law enforcement responses to women in crises.

Meeting Bulletin #1: July 2024
Coinciding with the public launch of the Women’s Justice Commission, the commission’s first meeting focused on exploring women’s pathways into the criminal justice system.

Women’s Justice: A Preliminary Assessment of Women in the Criminal Justice System
This assessment reviews existing research about women’s pathways into the system and the challenges they face from arrest through reentry.

Women’s Justice: By the Numbers
This series of charts presents a portrait of women in the criminal justice system, highlighting trends in victimization, arrest rates, breakdown of offenses, sentence length, incarcerated populations, recidivism, racial disparities, and more.

Criminal Justice Gaps Between Women and Men Narrow on Violence, Other Key Measures
Former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch leads new national commission developing findings and recommendations to enhance women’s safety, health, and justice
Commission Members

Loretta Lynch(Chair)
Former U.S. Attorney General

Sarah Stitt(senior adviser)
First Lady, Oklahoma

Courtney Bryan
Executive Director, Center for Justice Innovation

Norma Cumpian
Assistant Deputy Director, Anti-Recidivism Coalition

Nancy Gertner
Retired Judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts; Senior Lecturer, Harvard Law School

Ed Gonzalez
Sheriff, Harris County, Texas

Leticia Longoria-Navarro
Executive Director, The Pathfinder Network

Chris Mathias
Representative, Idaho State Legislature

Anne Precythe
Owner, Precythe Sturm Advisory Group, LLC; Former Director, Missouri Department of Corrections

Emily Salisbury
Associate Professor of Social Work; Director, Utah Criminal Justice Center, University of Utah

Topeka K. Sam
Founder, The Ladies of Hope Ministries

Brenda V. Smith
Professor, American University Washington College of Law; Director, Project on Addressing Prison Rape

Jillian Snider
Policy Director, Criminal Justice and Civil Liberties, R Street Institute; Retired NYPD Officer

Carolyn Sufrin
Associate Professor, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Gyn/Ob; Founder and Director, Advocacy and Research on Reproductive Wellness of Incarcerated People

Tori Verber Salazar
Founder and CEO, Law Offices of Tori Verber Salazar; Former District Attorney, San Joaquin County

Whitney Westerfield
Director of Legal and Government Affairs, LifeSkills; Former State Senator, Kentucky

Pamela Winn
President and CEO, RestoreHER US.America

Stephanie Akhter
Director, Women's Justice Commission
Expert advisers

Alyssa Benedict
Executive Director, CORE Associates, and Co-Founder, The Women's Justice Institute

Deanne Benos
Co-Founder and Director, The Women’s Justice Institute

Janaé Bonsu-Love
Director of Research, Building Movement Project

Marium Durrani
Vice President of Policy, National Domestic Violence Hotline

Erica King
Senior Manager, Center for Effective Public Policy National Resource Center on Justice-Involved Women

Anadora (Andie) Moss
Founder and CEO, The Moss Group
Commission meetings
Meeting Bulletin #1: July 2024
Meeting Bulletin #2: August 2024
Meeting Bulletin #3: January 2025
Meeting Bulletin #4: March 2025
About The Art
The banner design was created by artist sheri crider, an Albuquerque-based artist whose work “reimagines the best and worst of ourselves” and engages nontraditional audiences in galleries, prison cells, classrooms, courtrooms, and other spaces. The Women’s Justice Commission also thanks CCJ member Syrita Steib and incarcerated women in graphic design for Oregon Corrections Enterprises for their inspiration.
ARTIST’S STATEMENT
“The portraits reflect real women who have and still are navigating incarceration. The individuals behind statistics and reports are crucial to fostering transformation in the criminal justice system.”
Supporters
Support for the Women’s Justice Commission comes from Ford Foundation, George Kaiser Family Foundation, the Joan Ganz Cooney & Holly Peterson Fund, The Just Trust, Ms. Foundation for Women, the Navigation Fund, the National Football League, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Philanthropies, Southern Company Foundation, and the Tow Foundation. The Commission also receives support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and other CCJ general operating contributors.