That's somewhat what I was emphasizing earlier.
In a community that experiences this dynamic of violence to a high degree, the categories of executioner and victim completely overlap. These women who find themselves incarcerated are above all victims of all kinds of things, of having experienced forms of institutionalization early in their lives, of having been placed, or being separated from their families and finding themselves in all kinds of situations.
We conducted a study on the paths of women who are incarcerated in order to try to understand their paths. Their path is mainly strewn with injuries. I believe that anyone who finds himself in that situation, your or I, might be capable of committing a violent crime, because that's part of this dynamic. Furthermore, many women wind up incarcerated because they went back to their spouse as well.
So, yes, it's terrible, and incarceration obviously resolves nothing. I think we have to draw on the idea of healing lodges, as is the case in the west. Of course, it's essential to consider that a woman who acts violently may need to be helped more than to be excluded from society. You don't learn to live in society by being excluded from it. That's the classic paradox of prison.