The Trials of Nina McCall

Sex, Surveillance, and the Decades-Long Government Plan to Imprison "Promiscuous" Women

Paperback, 368 pages

Published by Beacon Press.

ISBN:
978-0-8070-2185-9
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

No rating (0 reviews)

The nearly forgotten story of the fight against the American Plan, a government program designed to regulate women’s bodies and sexuality

Nina McCall was one of many women unfairly imprisoned by the United States government throughout the twentieth century. Tens, probably hundreds, of thousands of women and girls were locked up—usually without due process—simply because officials suspected these women were prostitutes, carrying STIs, or just “promiscuous.”

This discriminatory program, dubbed the “American Plan,” lasted from the 1910s into the 1950s, implicating a number of luminaries, including Eleanor Roosevelt, John D. Rockefeller Jr., Earl Warren, and even Eliot Ness, while laying the foundation for the modern system of women’s prisons. In some places, vestiges of the Plan lingered into the 1960s and 1970s, and the laws that undergirded it remain on the books to this day.

Nina McCall’s story provides crucial insight into the lives of countless other women incarcerated under …

4 editions