Justice secretary unveils plans to shut women’s prisons amid overcrowding crisis

 

image credit: Pexels/Duda www.pexels.com

 

source: The Independent  |  published: 24 September 2024

 

Justice secretary Shabana Mahmood has set out plans to slash the number of women going to jail and ultimately close women’s prisons amid an overcrowding crisis. She unveiled a new body, the women’s justice board, which will have the “ultimate ambition of having fewer women’s prisons” – potentially allowing them to be converted to male or mixed jails.


The prison population in England and Wales hit a record new high a fortnight ago, with 88,521 people behind bars – but there are just 3,440 women in jail.


More than half – 55 per cent – are victims of domestic abuse, while two-thirds have committed non-violent offences. Ministers want to improve services like community support and residential women’s centres to provide an alternative to prison.

It comes after the government said thousands of inmates would be freed early in a bid to ease overcrowding.

In her speech to the Labour conference in Liverpool, Ms Mahmood said that when she took over the ministerial role, the crisis had been just “one bad day from disaster”.


“Within minutes, I was told our justice system was on the point of collapse,” she said. "Within weeks, our prisons would overflow. Had that happened, the consequences would have been apocalyptic."


Read full article >

Woman in detention
by Family Fund Team 30 April 2025
A lack of supported housing was the biggest reason for delayed discharges from mental health hospitals in England last year, costing the NHS about £71m, according to a report.
Empty detention unit
by Family Fund Team 29 April 2025
The chair of England's first public inquiry into mental health deaths, Baroness Lampard, has vowed to "seek out the truth" - despite difficulties getting documents from the NHS.
Jean Charles de Menezes
by Family Fund Team 26 April 2025
The mother of a man shot dead by police in a London Underground station after being mistaken for a terrorist has said “everyone should watch” a new dramatisation of her son’s killing.
Families at a London demonstration
by Family Fund Team 26 April 2025
Families of people who died in police custody in the United Kingdom held the first public People’s Tribunal on the 5th & 6th of April 2025 at Regent's University in Central London.
Man behind prison cell bars
by Family Fund Team 26 April 2025
Four more prisoners serving Public Protection sentences have taken their own lives, taking the number to 94. Another 37 released IPPs took their own lives in the five years to 2024.
Man looking depressed
by Family Fund Team 26 April 2025
The objective of this Black emancipatory action research project was to explore the role of Black-led community organisations in supporting Black mental health and wellbeing in the UK.
Show More