Humans peeing: Justice-involved women’s access to toilets in public spaces

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Humans peeing: Justice-involved women’s access to toilets in public spaces
Abstract
Justice-involved women face myriad challenges as they negotiate the terms of community supervision and manage the long-term implications and stigma of living with a criminal record. Major tasks that women juggle include securing safe, affordable housing, finding and retaining employment, accessing physical and mental health care (including substance use treatment), and handling relationships with family, friends, children, and intimate partners. In addition to these responsibilities, women must meet their basic physiological needs to eat, sleep, and use the toilet. Women’s ability to safely meet their personal care needs may impact their capacity to manage their criminal-legal challenges. This study uses qualitative methods to understand justice-involved women’s lived experiences related to urination. Specifically, the study reports on a thematic analysis of 8 focus groups conducted with justice-involved women (n = 58) and the results of a toilet audit conducted in the downtown areas of the small city in the United States where the focus group participants were living. Findings suggest that women had limited access to restrooms and reported urinating outside. Lack of restroom access impacted their engagement with social services support and employment and their ability to travel through public spaces. Women perceived their public toilet options as unsafe, increasing their sense of vulnerability and reinforcing the idea that they did not have full access to citizenship in the community because of their criminal-legal involvement. The exclusion and denial of women’s humanity that is perpetuated by a lack of public toilet access impacts women’s psychosocial outcomes. City governments, social service agencies, and employers are encouraged to consider how lack of toilet access may impact their public safety and criminal-legal objectives and expand opportunities for people to access safe restroom facilities.
Publication
PLOS ONE
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Date
Mar 10, 2023
Volume
18
Issue
3
Pages
e0282917
Journal Abbr
PLOS ONE
Citation Key
smoyerHumansPeeingJusticeinvolved2023
Accessed
3/23/23, 12:57 PM
ISSN
1932-6203
Short Title
Humans peeing
Language
en
Library Catalog
PLoS Journals
Extra
1 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Smoyer, A. B., Pittman, A., & Borzillo, P. (2023). Humans peeing: Justice-involved women’s access to toilets in public spaces. PLOS ONE, 18(3), e0282917. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282917