Of the 700 women being held in a Queensland correctional facility, a handful of them are mothers allowed to keep their young children with them on the inside.
Right now in the sunshine state there are 15 children living in prison with their mothers.
They are allowed to stay until the school-age of five and it is something that is encouraged by authorities.
“Those first five years, they’re very formative,” Jon Francis-Jones, head of Townsville Correctional Complex in north Queensland, said.
“The whole thrust of this is about maintaining family contact, that important mother-child bond. As for the negative impact on children, I think that’s completely outweighed by being separated from their mother.”
‘It gives you the incentive to do better’
Eight children, from three weeks old to three years, live in the Townsville Women’s Correctional Centre’s Mothers and Babies Unit — a besser-block building with a shared common room, shared bathroom, separate quarters for each mother and her children, along with a small playground outside.
Surrounding the unit are other buildings which house regular prisoners in this medium-security.
Inmates are free to move around throughout the day.
The design is similar to that of a collection of university residential colleges, except surrounded by a razor wire fence.
Tamika (not her real name) has an 18-month-old boy and recently gave birth to a girl inside the prison.