{"id":38539,"date":"2019-03-01T21:37:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-02T02:37:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\/noticias\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\/"},"modified":"2023-05-19T10:01:35","modified_gmt":"2023-05-19T15:01:35","slug":"empowering-women-colombian-prisons","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\/en\/noticias\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\/","title":{"rendered":"Empowering women in Colombian prisons"},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Charlie Ruth Castro, Rotary E-Club of Sogamoso Global, Colombia Ihad to go to prison to understand how education for innovation is the path for empowering millions of Latin American     and Caribbean women economically. I\u2019ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe     education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door. In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and     all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through     summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into     generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need. We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at     Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and     Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within     Boyac\u00e1. The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a     hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program,     \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we     dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and     leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to     participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging     while we planned powerful goals for a better future.      A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily.  My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing     ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and     common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from     their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal     disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and     repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime,     liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty     products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering     society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as     well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating     for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions     and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug     microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers,     and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas     and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming     self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them     and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the     same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished     Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women     allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have     concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe,     but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world     today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and     women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools     that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new     technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can     secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our     countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi,         Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. Follow Charlie Ruth         Castro @CharlieRuth Originally published in Rotary Voices \u2013 Stories of service from around the world<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":2799,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[582],"tags":[],"area-academica":[],"tematica":[],"tipo-noticia":[21],"class_list":["post-38539","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general-news","tipo-noticia-estandar"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.3 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Empowering women in Colombian prisons<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"By Charlie Ruth Castro, Rotary E-Club of Sogamoso Global, Colombia Ihad to go to prison to understand how education for innovation is the path for empowering millions of Latin American   and Caribbean women economically. I\u2019ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe   education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door. In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and   all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through   summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into   generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need. We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at   Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and   Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within   Boyac\u00e1. The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a   hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program,   \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we   dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and   leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to   participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging   while we planned powerful goals for a better future.   A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing   ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and   common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from   their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal   disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and   repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime,   liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty   products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering   society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as   well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating   for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions   and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug   microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers,   and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas   and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming   self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them   and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the   same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished   Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women   allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have   concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe,   but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world   today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and   women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools   that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new   technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can   secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our   countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi,     Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. Follow Charlie Ruth     Castro @CharlieRuth Originally published in Rotary Voices \u2013 Stories of service from around the world\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\/en\/noticias\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Empowering women in Colombian prisons\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"By Charlie Ruth Castro, Rotary E-Club of Sogamoso Global, Colombia Ihad to go to prison to understand how education for innovation is the path for empowering millions of Latin American   and Caribbean women economically. I\u2019ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe   education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door. In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and   all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through   summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into   generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need. We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at   Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and   Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within   Boyac\u00e1. The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a   hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program,   \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we   dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and   leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to   participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging   while we planned powerful goals for a better future.   A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing   ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and   common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from   their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal   disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and   repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime,   liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty   products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering   society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as   well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating   for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions   and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug   microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers,   and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas   and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming   self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them   and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the   same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished   Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women   allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have   concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe,   but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world   today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and   women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools   that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new   technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can   secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our   countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi,     Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. Follow Charlie Ruth     Castro @CharlieRuth Originally published in Rotary Voices \u2013 Stories of service from around the world\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\/en\/noticias\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Facultad de Administraci\u00f3n | Uniandes\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/AdmonUniandes\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2019-03-02T02:37:00+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2023-05-19T15:01:35+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/banner-destacado-empowering-women-in-colombian-prisons.jpg\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"800\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"400\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Sebasti\u00e1n Ariza\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:creator\" content=\"@admonuniandes\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:site\" content=\"@admonuniandes\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"Sebasti\u00e1n Ariza\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"4 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\\\/\\\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"Article\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/#article\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/\"},\"author\":{\"name\":\"Sebasti\u00e1n Ariza\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/#\\\/schema\\\/person\\\/a50a2f98f52ed157de75949a0af0418e\"},\"headline\":\"Empowering women in Colombian prisons\",\"datePublished\":\"2019-03-02T02:37:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2023-05-19T15:01:35+00:00\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/\"},\"wordCount\":894,\"publisher\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/#organization\"},\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2021\\\/11\\\/banner-destacado-empowering-women-in-colombian-prisons.jpg\",\"articleSection\":[\"General News\"],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"},{\"@type\":[\"WebPage\",\"ItemPage\"],\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/\",\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/\",\"name\":\"Empowering women in Colombian prisons\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/#website\"},\"primaryImageOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/#primaryimage\"},\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/en\\\/noticias\\\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\\\/#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\\\/\\\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2021\\\/11\\\/banner-destacado-empowering-women-in-colombian-prisons.jpg\",\"datePublished\":\"2019-03-02T02:37:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2023-05-19T15:01:35+00:00\",\"description\":\"By Charlie Ruth Castro, Rotary E-Club of Sogamoso Global, Colombia Ihad to go to prison to understand how education for innovation is the path for empowering millions of Latin American and Caribbean women economically. I\u2019ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door. In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need. We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within Boyac\u00e1. The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program, \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging while we planned powerful goals for a better future. A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime, liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers, and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe, but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi, Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. 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I\u2019ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe   education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door. In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and   all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through   summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into   generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need. We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at   Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and   Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within   Boyac\u00e1. The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a   hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program,   \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we   dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and   leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to   participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging   while we planned powerful goals for a better future.   A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing   ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and   common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from   their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal   disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and   repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime,   liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty   products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering   society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as   well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating   for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions   and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug   microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers,   and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas   and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming   self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them   and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the   same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished   Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women   allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have   concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe,   but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world   today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and   women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools   that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new   technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can   secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our   countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi,     Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. Follow Charlie Ruth     Castro @CharlieRuth Originally published in Rotary Voices \u2013 Stories of service from around the world","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/administracion.uniandes.edu.co\/en\/noticias\/empowering-women-colombian-prisons\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"Empowering women in Colombian prisons","og_description":"By Charlie Ruth Castro, Rotary E-Club of Sogamoso Global, Colombia Ihad to go to prison to understand how education for innovation is the path for empowering millions of Latin American   and Caribbean women economically. I\u2019ve never committed a crime; I belong to that group of people who believe   education is the most sophisticated tool we have to opening any door. In 2016, I founded MujeresConDerechos.org with the idea of reminding society that all girls and   all women are powerful. For this reason, I have dedicated myself to gathering the most influential leaders through   summits, marches, and a television program. The attention and support I have received has been converted into   generating innovative programs for girls and women most in need. We had an amazing opportunity in October 2017 to put into practice the methodology of innovation I had created at   Harvard University and that I had successfully tested with 1,500 youths living in rural areas of Mexico and   Colombia. Now, I would be able to test my theories with 170 women in a medium-security prison in Sogamoso, within   Boyac\u00e1. The first day we visited them, the other women who went with me left terrified. A prison is a   hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program,   \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we   dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and   leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to   participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging   while we planned powerful goals for a better future.   A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing   ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and   common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from   their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal   disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and   repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime,   liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty   products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering   society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as   well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating   for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions   and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug   microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers,   and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas   and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming   self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them   and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the   same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished   Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women   allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have   concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe,   but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world   today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and   women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools   that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new   technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can   secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our   countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi,     Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. 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A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. However, I insisted we return and begin our program, \u201cNuevos Comienzos Innovando\u201d (Innovative New Beginnings). The first two months, we dedicated ourselves to working with them on the concepts of confidence, forgiveness, strength, peace, and leadership. It was incredible to see over a short period of time how these ladies went from being hermits and melancholy, to participating and hopeful with our process. By 22 December 2017, we were capable of laughing, crying, and hugging while we planned powerful goals for a better future. A prison is a hell designed to disempower and mutilate human potential daily. My methodology for digital empowerment bases itself on a very simple principle: we are all capable of seeing ourselves as superheroes through the use of innovation when we put our strength to resolving the more general and common problems affecting our community. These ladies have come to understand that the three problems most affecting women in prison are their separation from their children, the lack of information regarding staying healthy in a highly unhealthy space, and interpersonal disputes about debts owed, that end in shocking punishments, such as the infamous \u201cdungeon\u201d \u2013 a dark, cold, and repugnant space where they could be held for up to 72 hours. With these women, I\u2019ve had the most profound discussions about justice, the economy of crime, liberty, and transcendence. The methodology we used has inspired them to plan their own brand and line of beauty products made from organic herbs. Those least interested in these persons having a decent job and re-entering society are the public servants of the National Penitentiary and Prison Institute of Columbia. The challenges, as well as humiliation, they have produced for the team and the women of our program are innumerable. But advocating for a more just society demands arming yourself with patience, and being creative in order to focus on the solutions and not the problems. The majority of the women who took part in my program arrived at this prison due to crimes such as drug microtrafficking and theft; some landed here for homicide, kidnapping, or extortion. Almost all of them are mothers, and nearly a third of them are the second generation in their families to commit a crime. Most come from rural areas and bands of poverty within medium-sized cities. Almost all of them chased the fantasy of making money and becoming self-sufficient via the activities that led them to crime. A great many of them know their legal past will mark them and if they do not learn appropriate work skills or work on themselves from within, they are condemned to repeat the same mistake on the outside. However there are two things that almost all these women share: they come from an impoverished Colombia and they face a culture that is violent against girls and women. My team and I feel grateful these women allowed us to research and work on a reality that affects so many. Despite how difficult it is to believe, we have concluded prisons are where we will find the potential to transform the country. Yes \u2013 impossible to believe, but they are. The women in this prison made it possible for me to understand that the inequality and violence we see in the world today has its origins in gender inequality and lack of access to an empowering education for millions of girls and women. It is time to invest in the education of innovation for our girls and young women. If we equip them with the tools that allow them to understand problems as opportunities for solution, or go as far as to teach them to use new technologies to create sources of employment, and to achieve excellence in the jobs of today and tomorrow, we can secure their economic empowerment, and we will be supporting the innovative and sustainable industrialization of our countries. Charlie Ruth was one of six young innovators recognized during Rotary Day at the United Nations in Nairobi, Kenya, in November. Read more about the innovators. 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