The experiences of currently and formerly incarcerated women in a time of pandemic: Implications for life-giving communities

This article assesses the adequacy of the church’s responses to women currently and formerly in conflict with the law in the Philippines and offers feminist theological reflections on the need for gender-and culturally sensitive pastoral services for them in a time of pandemic. Drawing upon case studies and interviews, this paper examines the lived experiences and social worlds of women who currently occupy or formerly held the status of persons deprived of liberty. The researcher discusses the common themes and nuances in the issues and challenges they confront from behind bars and in free society, and their struggles for survival throughout the pandemic. This paper also examines their service needs and, in the case of those released from the penitentiary, the salient factors that contribute to the risk of recidivism. The researcher discusses the implications of the issues and service needs of justice-involved women for building life-giving communities.

. Based on the recommendations made by the IATF, the government subsequently transitioned to less restrictive forms of quarantine such as modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ) and general community quarantine (GCQ), which local government units (LGUs) implemented accordingly, depending on the extent of COVID-19 cases in their respective jurisdiction (Al Jazeera 2020a; Calonzo 2020;CNN Philippines 2020a;Madarang 2020a;Romero, Medez & Chrisostomo 2020). That said, this did not lead to notable reductions in the number of new COVID-19 cases after the pandemic broke out (See 2021; Stormer 2020; Yee 2020). The Duterte administration also relied heavily on the military and the police to manage checkpoints, ensure order, and implement health protocols, even to the point of authorising the use of force against people tagged as "troublemakers" for protesting against the restrictions while under community quarantine (Amnesty International 2020; Hapal 2021;See 2020).
The extended lockdown, which led to prolonged restrictions in people's mobility and employment, inevitably resulted in adverse economic impacts on the general population. Policies such as "no work, no pay" and restrictions in the operation of businesses beyond those providing essential services, among others, led to massive job losses and the displacement of economic opportunities, aggravated by limited or fragmented safety nets (Madarang 2020b;See 2020). As of August 2020, the unemployment rate in the Philippines rose to 46 per cent, impacting on 27.3 million people (Hapal 2021). While the effects of the pandemic on lowincome communities and the informal sector have been discussed in media reports, academic research, and public debate, its consequences for other vulnerable populations have not been explored as much. In particular, the impact of the pandemic on individuals who currently occupy or formerly held the status of persons deprived of liberty (PDL or PsDL), the term for inmates in Philippine corrections parlance has received minimal attention.
Existing information about this population group is limited to the reports of the media and non-government organisations (CNN Philippines 2020a; Human Rights Watch 2020; International Committee of the Red Cross 2020). First-hand accounts of prison life in the time of the pandemic -and in public discourse, in general -focus on men, while women are treated as an afterthought and thus receive scant attention (CNN Philippines 2020b;CNN Philippines 2020c;See 2020). This is consistent with the historic invisibility of justice-involved women 1 in academic and 1 A "justice-involved" person pertains to an individual who has been involved with the justice system, such as through incarceration or being on parole. For the purposes of this paper, the term "justice-involved women" will be used interchangeably with "women in conflict with the law" or "women formerly in conflict with the law".
public discourse prior to the pandemic because of the focus on men in the criminal justice system, despite the advancements in feminist criminological research over the past 30 years (Chesney-Lind & Pasko 2004;Howe 1994;Nagel & Johnson 2004;Steffensemeier & Allan 2004;Thomas 2003). Research on the experiences of justice-involved women in the global south remains limited, due to the greater attention given to their counterparts in Western, industrialised nations ( Ransley 1999;Veloso 2016;Veloso 2022;Villero 2006). Studies on the reentry experiences and challenges of women formerly in conflict with the law are likewise limited (Davies & Cook 1999;Renzetti & Goodstein 2001;Richie 2001), as the literature often focused on the experiences of men (Petersilia 2003). Information about the experiences and challenges of currently and formerly incarcerated women in the time of the pandemic is still emerging. It is thus crucial to examine the issues and service needs of justice-involved women and the impact of an unprecedented emergency such as the COVID-19 pandemic on their situation.

STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
This study assesses the adequacy of the church's responses to currently and formerly incarcerated women. It also offers feminist theological reflections on the need for gender-and culturally sensitive pastoral services for this marginalised population group. This study examines the social worlds and experiences faced by women who currently hold or once held the status of persons deprived of liberty in the Philippines. It assesses the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their situation. This paper also examines the role of the church in serving as an agent of restorative justice and in providing interventions that promote the dignity of women currently or formerly in conflict with the law. The researcher discusses the implications of the issues and service needs of currently and formerly incarcerated women, for building life-giving communities.
To assess the adequacy of the church's responses to women in conflict with the law and the need for gender-and culturally sensitive pastoral services for them, this research seeks to answer the following questions: • What are the experiences of incarcerated women in a time of pandemic?
How did the COVID-19 pandemic impact on their situation in prison?
• What are the re-entry experiences of formerly incarcerated women in a time of pandemic? How did the COVID-19 pandemic impact on their transition to free society?
• What are the service needs confronting justice-involved women?
• How can the church provide pastoral services for justice-involved women in a time of pandemic?
• What are the implications of the women's issues and service needs for building life-giving communities?

METHODOLOGY
This article uses case studies of women with the status of persons deprived of liberty. The material for the case studies was culled from observations during regular visits to women deprived of liberty as part of the researcher's long-term volunteer work in prison, as well as telephone calls with women deprived of liberty after the pandemic escalated. Meanwhile, the researcher conducted interviews with 12 formerly incarcerated women, who resided in Metro Manila or provinces in the northern and southern Philippines. The researcher also engaged in field observation at the places of residence of some informants, whenever possible. Informed consent was obtained from the informants. The names of the informants are withheld to protect their privacy.
The researcher incorporated principles from Catholic Social Teachings (CST) in examining the situation of currently and formerly incarcerated women and the implications thereof for the promotion of life-giving communities. This paper uses the lenses of feminist and intersectional theology. As such, it reflects the dialogue of theology with feminist theories, intersectionality theory, and other perspectives in gender studies and sociology.

SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
This study is intended to benefit currently and formerly incarcerated women, by promoting awareness about their experiences and issues. This paper also seeks to benefit pastoral groups and civil society organisations that seek to serve persons deprived of liberty, as well as individuals transitioning to independent living, as part of their ministries.

Profile of women in prison
For the purposes of the case study, the researcher focused on two women with the status of persons deprived of liberty at the Correctional Institution for Women (CIW), the main penitentiary for women, located in Mandaluyong City, Metro Manila, the capital of the Philippines. She selected these women on the basis of their regular contact as part of her long-term volunteer work in prison; she also had more contact with these women after the pandemic struck.
Both women were in their early to mid-40s. In terms of their ethnic background, one woman identified with a Christianised ethnolinguistic group, particularly Waray, and another identified with an Islamised ethnic group, particularly Maguindanaon. 2 One woman identified as a Muslim, while the other identified as a Born-Again Christian; that said, the latter woman embraced Islam (balik-Islam or revert to Islam, in Filipino parlance) upon marrying a Muslim, but converted to Christianity three years prior to the pandemic.
With respect to their civil status, one woman was married and the other widowed. Both women had children, be these biological or adopted. One woman had an adopted child, while the other had three biological children and three stepchildren. In terms of their educational attainment, one woman was a high-school graduate, while the other had completed some years of elementary school. Both women were enrolled in classes as part of the Alternative Learning System (ALS) of the prison. 2 In the Philippines, people are distinguished according to race, ethnicity, and religion. Race and ethnicity tend to overlap with religion because the Spanish and American colonial eras historically led to the institutionalisation of racial categories, namely Christian, Muslim, and indigenous peoples (IPs), depending on whether their ancestors had converted to Christianity and assimilated to colonialism, or embraced Islam or maintained their indigenous religion and thus resisted colonialism. Even people's ethnic heritage is associated with ethnic groups that had historically converted to Christianity or Islam or retained their ancestral religion. The stereotypes that are associated with being a Christian and a Muslim, as well as an indigenous person, tend to overlap with racial and ethnic stereotypes. In addition, people's ethnic groups are also termed ethnolinguistic groups in the Philippine context, in that their ethnicity is distinguished by the language/s they speak (Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs [2013]; Ty [2010:6-9]).
Both women were serving time in prison for drug charges. One woman had a daughter, who was incarcerated at the same penitentiary, also for drug charges, although they were not co-defendants.

Demographic profile of formerly incarcerated women
The women who formerly held the status of persons deprived of liberty were aged between 33 and 61 years at the time of the interviews; the median age of the women was 44.
In terms of ethnic background, half of the informants (six women) belonged to Christianised ethnolinguistic groups that were considered minorities in the nation. Of this, one woman identified as Ilocano, one woman as Ilonggo, two women as Visayan, and two women as Waray. Meanwhile, three women identified as Tagalog, a Christianised ethnolinguistic group associated with the dominant culture in the context of Philippine society. The remaining three women traced their roots to more than one racial and/ or ethnic group. One woman identified as having Ilocano and Chinese ancestry. One woman was of Ilocano and Ilonggo descent, while another was of Ilocano and Tagalog descent (see Table 1). In terms of religion, all women were part of Christian denominations, in that five women identified as Born-Again Christians, while seven women identified as Catholics (see Table 2). In terms of their educational attainment, one woman had completed elementary school, two women had completed some years of high school, and four women had completed some semesters or years of college education. Moreover, two women had completed two-year courses such as a secretarial course and a course in hotel and restaurant services. Three women were college graduates. Their majors included courses such as psychology, public administration, and tourism (see Table 3). With respect to their civil status, two women were single; five women were partnered, and two women were married. One woman was separated and two women were widowed (see Table 4). Seven out of the 12 informants were mothers, who had between three to seven children; the average number of children was three. Of this, three women had children who were minors. In the case of two informants, their dependent children lived with them, although one also lived with relatives, on occasion. One woman, who identified as a single parent, disclosed that her young children lived with their father's side of the family. Four women had no children at all.
The researcher found that the majority of the formerly incarcerated informants ended up in prison for drug-related offences (6 women). A small minority were convicted of other crimes such as illegal recruitment (4 women); slight illegal detention 3 (1 woman), and child abuse and falsification of public documents (1 woman). Upon the appeal of their cases with the higher courts, two informants were eventually acquitted of the criminal charges of which they had been convicted at the lower court. Five women insisted on their innocence and claimed to have been implicated in the offences of close associates or other significant networks through pathways of deception and betrayal (see Table 5). The women PsDL faced multiple vulnerabilities in prison, which the COVID-19 pandemic only exacerbated. Before the lockdown took effect, the researcher had visited CIW five times, between 13 January and 1 March 2020, and noted that low-income women, especially those without regular visitors, faced multiple difficulties in meeting even their basic needs in prison. The women included in this case study were not above this trend. Aside from performing odd jobs in prison, such as doing laundry for other PsDL with more resources and serving in a now-defunct organisation for PsDL who assisted prison staff on duty, these women often relied on donations from faith-based organisations, non-government organisations, and other benefactors.
As persons deprived of liberty, these women immediately felt the impact of the lack of safety nets when the pandemic struck, and President Rodrigo Duterte placed the entire Luzon on lockdown (Al Jazeera 2020b). During the second week of March 2020, a few days before the Luzon-wide lockdown took effect, visits to the penitentiary were suspended for security and health reasons. Some duty-bearers were earlier quoted generalising jails as "safe" and "COVID-free" (CNN Philippines 2020a). Yet the virus spread in both prisons and jails, and even claimed the lives of some PsDL (CNN Philippines 2020b; CNN Philippines 2020c).
To their credit, the prison staff immediately conducted disinfection activities and continued to do so regularly. The prison administration also permitted the delivery of care packages and donations, subject to strict inspection and sanitation protocols. Yet the women still felt the consequences of having limited resources from behind bars, exacerbated by the suspension of visits and the limited number of donations that initially arrived. One of the women, who frequently contacted the researcher, gave regular updates about the turn of events and the impact of the pandemic on their situation. She once disclosed that even her toiletries were severely limited. She revealed: "Even shampoo here is hard to come by. I haven't used shampoo in a month." The other woman, who had been diagnosed with hypertension prior to the pandemic, disclosed that she held on to the medicine donated to her by a religious volunteer. Although the infirmary had medicine for hypertension, the said woman PDL was worried about their supplies running out. While the prison administration was able to obtain donations of face masks and alcohol, among other necessities, visible space constraints in prison made it difficult to observe health protocols implemented in free society. The policies relating to "social distancing" or "physical distancing" are a case in point, in that these are hard to enforce, due to the congestion of the penitentiary, which is linked to the increased rate of women's incarceration, mainly due to drug-related charges. Prior to the pandemic, it was common for two persons deprived of liberty in CIW to share a single bed. This meant that four people, instead of two, occupied a bunk bed. The same set-up continued, with the exception of PsDL, who had been isolated for demonstrating COVID-19 symptoms or who had been placed in quarantine as a result of contracting the virus. Such living conditions led to the imminent risk of the spread of diseases such as COVID-19.
One of the women, who was an officer at her dormitory and who was also part of the aforementioned organisation that assisted corrections officers on duty, spoke at length about her fear of contracting COVID-19. During one of her telephone calls to the researcher, she shared that those who had a cough were immediately moved to another comparatively "distant" spot in their dormitory, although the limited space made it unrealistic to refrain from close contact; this trend was also reflected in one of the documentaries released about the correctional facility in 2020. Moreover, the woman related how she avoided being confined at the prison chapel, which had been allotted for any PDL showing COVID-19 symptoms. She shared that medicine for fever, such as paracetamol, was more difficult to obtain, due to the restrictions surrounding the pandemic. As such, she took it upon herself to exercise whenever she felt feverish, which she deemed preferrable to being confined at the chapel, where she feared she would get even more ill upon exposure to other PsDL with fever, cough, and other COVID-19 symptoms.
The other woman, who washed the clothes of other PsDL and did other odd jobs to earn a living in prison, contracted COVID-19. She also contacted the researcher and disclosed that she was among the women PsDL transferred to a quarantine facility called "Site Harry"; the facility, created to decongest penal and detention facilities, was housed at the New Bilibid Prison (NBP), the main penitentiary for men, located in Muntinlupa City, Metro Manila (International Committee of the Red Cross [ICRC] 2020). She had stayed there for roughly one month. When asked about the treatment she received, she stated that she did not take any medicine, except for the maintenance medicine for hypertension given to her by a prison volunteer a few weeks before the pandemic broke out in 2020. Other than that, she said she simply rested and ate the food given to her during her time in recovery. She also disclosed that she got tired more easily and was often short of breath, even after she had been declared COVID-free and returned to CIW.
One of the women had a daughter in her early 20s, who was serving time at the same penitentiary. Prior to the pandemic, she had already taken it upon herself to support her daughter, by providing for her food and other necessities in prison, as both of them did not have any visitors to rely on. It can be inferred that the pandemic caused more economic hardship for herself and her daughter. The other woman likewise encountered more economic difficulties caused by the greater limitations in the supply of donations. Although she continued to engage in odd jobs in prison, this was halted for some time when she contracted COVID.

Re-entry issues and experiences of formerly incarcerated women
Most of the former justice-involved women informants came from lowincome and working-class communities, to which they returned after their release from prison. For some women, particularly those who got involved in drug-related crimes, their histories of gendered violence and abuse, poverty, and family problems led to their involvement in illegal activity. As formerly incarcerated women, the informants in this study encountered multiple challenges in their reintegration into free society. The COVID-19 pandemic only exacerbated their re-entry challenges.
Some of the re-entry challenges encountered by women in this study include dealing with the stigma associated with being a former PDL; obtaining employment and/or education; accessing public transportation; finding affordable housing, and securing healthcare. It was not uncommon for the informants to have strained relations with their families, some of whom had even disowned them. Those who were acquitted of their criminal convictions were pressured to file claims with the Victims Compensation Program of the Department of Justice (DOJ) on the basis of their unjust imprisonment. That said, the maximum amount that could be given to claimants was Php 10,000 and there was no guarantee that they would immediately receive the funds in full; the failure to file a claim in a timely manner -that is, within a year from their release from prison -led to its forfeiture. This was the experience of one woman, who had been acquitted of drug charges but immediately left for her hometown in the southern Philippines upon her release from prison. She only learned about the Victims Compensation Program years after her release, at which point it was too late to file a claim. Another woman, who stayed at the houses of her siblings in Metro Manila and in Cavite province, was aware of this and claimed that she would immediately file a claim within roughly one month after her release. Five informants, who had been released on parole, checked with their respective parole officers. One obtained an affidavit from the DOJ that declared that she was not among those mandated to "voluntarily surrender" to the nearest penal or detention facility. Yet this dilemma triggered immense anxiety on the part of the women. The fear of losing their jobs and/or dropping out of school, the trauma that they and their families had faced during their arrest, and the prospect of having no visitors if they would report back to prison were among the concerns they faced. One informant did report back to CIW, even if her crime was a drug offence and she had served her sentence, because she feared being targeted as part of President Duterte's "shoot-to-kill" orders. As such, she experienced the restrictions associated with being a "returnee" -that is, a former PDL under the custody of a penal institution -for a prolonged period. She also contracted COVID because she was still among the returnees who remained in CIW when the pandemic broke out, for which it took several months for her to receive clearance to go home.

Some informants faced tensions arising from the verbal instructions given by President
The women faced other persisting unmet needs, namely further education and skills training, drug rehabilitation, and family reunification and family-related responsibilities. Others faced challenges such as the lure of the underground economy and the risk of recidivism. For instance, one informant experienced being pressured to return to illegal activity through the threat of blackmail by higher echelons in the underground economy.
The women commonly faced intensified challenges relating to their survival as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. This is related to nationwide trends regarding the difficulties in finding work, particularly in the informal labour market and the service sector. True to form, some informants experienced unemployment or sporadic employment. Losing a job or a job offer also impacted on some informants. One informant, who worked at a chocolate shop and as a research assistant to a professor, lost her job when the knowledge of her background as a former PDL surfaced three months or so prior to the pandemic. Her partner, who had worked as a driver for an online shopping company, was laid off within less than two weeks after the lockdown took effect. The recession on account of the pandemic led to immense difficulties in their ability to find work. Another informant, who had just been released from prison six months or so prior to the pandemic, had started working as a nanny for her neighbour. Her neighbour's financial hardships led to her losing her job. Meanwhile, an informant, who had a pending job offer in a nearby province, had to forego this, due to travel bans. She experienced being unemployed for several months before landing a job as a security guard at a school in her hometown. As for another informant, who once operated an internet café, government-imposed restrictions on the operation of non-essential businesses led to difficulties in sustaining her previous business. She and her partner later opened a food franchise, although its operation was also impacted by government regulations as to the level of community quarantine. Other informants, particularly those who were middle-aged or senior citizens, also experienced difficulties in finding work, aggravated by fears about their greater vulnerability to contracting COVID-19; as such, they relied on family members to support them and their daily needs.
The informants who were employed still faced challenges. For instance, one informant, who worked in a business process outsourcing (BPO) company, encountered difficulties in purchasing an extra laptop, which she could use in order to work from home, as her children used the laptop owned by her family for their online classes. Another woman, who was about to start working at a BPO before the pandemic struck, disclosed that she had to leave in less than a year, due to high blood pressure, among other health issues that were brought about by the pandemic, in large part. Others, such as a woman working as a security guard, were constrained by the lack of access to public transportation, leading some to walk to their workplace at the height of the lockdown. Meanwhile, a student-informant experienced the disruptions impacting on educational institutions when classes were suspended during her final semester prior to her graduation.
Hunger and the lack of food security and resources were common experiences among the informants. For instance, one informant was threatened with arrest and later ordered to perform community service for stealing malunggay (horseradish) leaves from the tree of a neighbour who was a barangay (village) official. She insisted that she had intended to ask the barangay official if she could get some malunggay leaves from his tree, but no one was home when she went to his house. She admitted that her desperation drove her to steal, as she and her partner, who had lost his job due to the pandemic, had not eaten for two days. Lacking safety nets, they were often among the people who were hit hardest by the pandemic.

Service needs
Women in prison face multiple service needs as they continue to serve sentences in a time of pandemic. Aside from basic needs such as food, hygiene kits, alcohol, and face masks, they also confront unique issues stemming from the pandemic. Some prison staff disclosed offhand that they needed people to provide seminars or motivational talks on such issues as anxiety, depression, anger management, and preparation for reentry, among other topics, as the need for these was more pronounced in the time of the pandemic.
Meanwhile, formerly incarcerated women encounter multiple challenges in their reintegration into society, such as returning to disfranchised communities, obtaining employment, finding affordable housing, and access to social services. They also face multiple unmet needs, namely further education, healthcare, drug rehabilitation, and family reunification. Counselling for unaddressed issues, such as gendered violence and abuse and drug addiction, is also crucial. As these issues most likely influenced their involvement in illegal activity, these festering concerns could thus impact on their ability to cope with other related challenges in their transition to independent living. The COVID-19 pandemic has intensified these issues and service needs. Comprehensive services are needed to address the issues of women who served time behind bars, especially drug rehabilitation and unemployment, so as to counter the lure of the underground economy and recidivism, especially as the pandemic continues to drag on.

Of liminality and shared vulnerability in the time of the pandemic
Being an unprecedented health and social emergency, the pandemic has magnified the vulnerability of justice-involved women, be they current or former persons deprived of liberty. The current situation of women in prison and women working to rebuild their lives in free society reflects much liminality, given the disorientation and ambiguity that characterise this time of pandemic and the unlikelihood of returning to pre-pandemic behaviours and lifestyles despite the ongoing preparations for the transition to the "new normal", and the improbability of simply resuming former statuses and relationships in the event of their release from prison. At the same time, these liminal spaces and situations present opportunities to rethink and recalibrate new ways of being human.
The liminality of the situation of currently and formerly incarcerated women renders them vulnerable. At the same time, it exposes people's shared vulnerability, as exemplified by the instances during which dutybearers such as prison staff, family members and other significant networks of current and former women PDL, and other members of their communities contracted COVID-19 and/or experienced multiple hardships and constraints associated with the pandemic.
This sense of shared vulnerability compels concerned citizens, civil society, and the church and faith-based organisations to reflect upon new ways to cater to the needs of justice-involved women more effectively, especially in a period of metamorphosis. In this time of liminality, people's shared vulnerability can be channelled in an agentic way as a source of learning and as a catalyst for engaging in gender-and culturally sensitive responses and interventions that promote the dignity of currently and formerly incarcerated women and fostering compassionate, life-giving communities for their benefit.

THEOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS AND PASTORAL INTERVENTIONS
Visiting the imprisoned is one of the corporal works of mercy: "I was in prison and you visited me" (Matthew 25:36). In this time of the pandemic, reaching out not only to people behind bars, but also to formerly incarcerated individuals -a population group of which current and former justice-involved women are part -is a need to which the church and faithbased organisations are compelled to respond.
Some teachings that are part of Catholic Social Teaching are essential in building and promoting life-giving communities for justice-involved women. One of the themes of Catholic Social Teaching emphasises the life and dignity of the human person.
The Catholic Church proclaims that human life is sacred and that the dignity of the human person is the foundation of a moral vision for society. This belief is the foundation of all the principles of our social teaching. We believe that every person is precious, that people are more important than things, and that the measure of every institution is whether it threatens or enhances the life and dignity of the human person (USCCB 2021).
This viewpoint holds that each person is valuable, worthy, and deserving of dignity. As such, the moral fabric of society can be assessed based on the extent to which its institutions and its very structure promote the life and dignity of people, regardless of their social background. This teaching can be utilised to make the case for valuing and promoting the life and dignity of currently and formerly incarcerated women, to demonstrate that they matter, regardless of their legal transgressions. This resonates with biblical teachings that emphasise the avoidance of judging others. As part of one of the major social institutions that promotes social stability, the church is thus compelled to be an instrument of solidarity in upholding the dignity of current and former justice-involved women, particularly in the time of the pandemic, which has exposed numerous social inequalities at their core.
Another salient theme of Catholic Social Teaching focuses on the preferential option for the poor.
A basic moral test is how our most vulnerable members are faring. In a society marred by deepening divisions between rich and poor, our tradition instructs us to put the needs of the poor and vulnerable people first (USCCB 2021).
This teaching is very timely in terms of responding to the call to be of service to justice-involved women. Women in conflict with the law are among the poorest of the poor, in the sense of being deprived of freedoman essential resource for human flourishing -and are thus as vulnerable as they can get. Formerly incarcerated women remain vulnerable, given the multiple barriers they confront in their readjustment to free society and the stigma they face due to their background. The church is thus compelled to be an instrument of compassion in the face of multiple vulnerabilities that current and former justice-involved women confront, particularly in the time of a pandemic.
Feminist theology recognises the unique role of gender in shaping women's circumstances and opportunities, including the lived experiences of women involved in the justice system. Intersectional theology recognises overlapping inequities relating to gender, race, social class, and other social positions, and the impact thereof on people's opportunities (Kim & Shaw 2018). The nexus of feminist theology and intersectional theology can be used to build life-giving communities in areas where these are especially needed, such as among women currently or formerly involved in the criminal justice system. This entails recognising that women's conflicts with the law often occur because they are women, as a consequence of living in a society that grants them limited options or that compels them to exercise agency in ways that might lead to their involvement in illegal activity or implication in the offences of others.
The first version of the creation story in the Book of Genesis underscores the equality of women and men: "So God created humankind in his image, in the image of God, he created them; male and female he created them" (Genesis 1:27). The same passage can be used to emphasise the inherent dignity of women currently or formerly in conflict with the law. Meanwhile, a passage in St. Paul's Letter to the Galatians points to the abolition of social differences among people, so as to promote equality within the Christian faith: "There is no longer Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave nor free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). According to Schüssler Fiorenza (1983:213), this biblical passage asserts that distinctions based on social position, including gender, social class, and perhaps even legal background, are insignificant, given the presumed equality of all people in the faith. These teachings can be used to eradicate cultural practices that perpetuate gender inequality and other interrelated oppressions and to empower women relegated to the margins of society not only because of their gender and other social locating factors, but also their history of legal transgressions. This need is especially vital in promoting a life-giving community, especially as the pandemic and its related effects continue to drag on.
Pastoral care for justice-involved women is a need that existed prior to the pandemic and is strongly felt as the pandemic drags on. The impact of social isolation, multiple disruptions in one's living situation, the strain of limited resources and safety net, and grief due to the death of loved ones to COVID-19 and related complications, are among the common concerns that people face as a result of the pandemic. Currently and formerly incarcerated women are not above these issues. It is important for pastoral interventions to take a non-judgemental approach and to promote inclusivity by extending such services, regardless of religious affiliation. It is hoped that this will pave the opportunity for the expansion of church services to include groups of women who have traditionally been overlooked, such as those with histories of involvement in the criminal justice system.
The link between the Catholic Church and state politics in Philippine society has been documented throughout history. This is evidenced by the mobilisation of the Catholic Church and other religious denominations in response to social and political issues (Bautista 2020;Buenaventura 2016). However, religious dynamics have also perpetuated patriarchal practices and views that impact on women. The entrenchment of faith in the cultural fabric and existing gender stereotypes that compel women to be morally upright and "pure", as exemplified by the Virgin Mary, among other factors, are likely to influence the limitations in responses that seek to ease the hardships experienced by justice-involved women, particularly in the time of a pandemic. The stigma attached to currently and formerly incarcerated women could possibly account for the hesitation of communities of the faithful to get involved -with the exception of faith-based organisations and pastoral agents that have assisted them through various programmes.
Given the restrictions in visiting prisons in the Philippines, the involvement of faith-based organisations over the past year has mainly taken the form of the delivery of donations for PsDL. However, some Catholic priests have continued to say Mass in prison, albeit in more confined settings. A possible area of intervention lies in pastoral services that religious and lay persons could provide virtually such as counselling, motivational talks, online recollections, and the like. These activities entail close coordination and consultation with the prison administration and staff, given the need to balance internet connectivity issues with security concerns in prison. Moreover, the church can serve as an agent in the promotion of restorative justice, by taking part in civil society initiatives, particularly advocacy work and lobbying activities that highlight the need for more humane responses, rather than punitive ones, toward people who commit legal transgressions, particularly those with limited histories of illegal activity and those involved in non-violent and non-heinous crimes. Such initiatives should include and benefit women in the criminal justice system, in view of their more vulnerable social positions and relational responsibilities and the vicious cycle of criminality that entraps their families.
Another area of intervention lies in support services to aid soon-to-bereleased or formerly incarcerated women in their transition to independent living. The Catholic Church could help provide comprehensive pastoral and social services such as transportation, housing, healthcare, livelihood assistance, counselling, and spiritual or religious activities (as needed) to former PsDL. The formation of support groups for formerly incarcerated women is also essential as a source of encouragement in their readjustment to free society. All these initiatives are helpful in building life-giving communities for justice-involved women.