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This year is the ten-year anniversary of The Corston Report, a landmark review from Baroness Jean Corston into women in the criminal justice system.

Women in Prison has launched a new report Corston+10 which reveals the scale of reversal to progress made in reforming the criminal justice system and reducing the women’s prison population following Baroness Corston’s recommendations, that, in 2007, received all-party support and Government backing.

Baroness Corston published 43 recommendations calling for a gender-distinct, women-centred and holistic approach to supporting women affected by the criminal justice system. They gained cross-party support and were broadly accepted by three successive governments. With our prisons in crisis, deaths and self-harm on the increase, there is growing consensus that there is an urgent need to reduce the prison population and revisiting Baroness Corston’s recommendations is a good place to start on how to achieve this.

To mark the anniversary WIP’s aim is to reduce the numbers of women in prison to 2,020 (or fewer) by 2020; reducing the human and financial cost of prison to communities, women and families. A reception today (7th March) at the House of Lords hosted by Baroness Corston and WIP will strengthen support for this campaign by bringing together women’s centres from across the country and women affected by the criminal justice system to meet with MPs and Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs).

In coinciding with International Women’s Day WIP is inspired by the slogan of #BeBoldForChange and has produced briefings for MPs and Police and Crime Commissioners which call on them to do just that.

Read WIP’s 2020: MP Briefing and 2020: PCC Briefing

 

The number of women in prison is in danger of increasing according to a new briefing published today by the Prison Reform Trust.

The report found that a sharp rise in the number of recalls to custody; increasing use of suspended sentence orders; and the continued decline in the number of community orders risk more women ending up behind bars.  Nearly 10 years after the publication of Baroness Corston’s review on women in the criminal justice system, Why Women?, reveals new figures showing that the number of women recalled to custody following their release has increased by over two-thirds (68%) since the end of 2014. Women recalled to custody now account for 8% of the total women’s prison population.

The number of women recalled to prison has risen dramatically following changes introduced by the Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014, which mandated post-custody supervision for all people serving sentences of more than one day. Women are not only recalled if they commit a further offence, but can be recalled to custody if they breach the conditions of their licence whilst under supervision. This may include missing an appointment with probation staff. Latest figures show that only just over a quarter of women (27%) were recalled for a further criminal charge.

Following concerns raised by the inspectorates of probation and prisons and the National Audit Office, the government is currently reviewing the contracts under which providers are commissioned to deliver rehabilitation services for offenders released from prison. A government strategy for women in the criminal justice system is due to be published in the summer.

The briefing reveals the growing use of suspended sentences, and the decline of community orders. The number of suspended prison sentences given to women has doubled in the last decade, whilst at the same time community orders have nearly halved.

Suspended sentences require compliance with court ordered requirements, with the threat of custody should a woman breach any of its terms. Their growing use over the last 10 years risks driving up the women’s prison population.

Between 1995 and 2010 the women’s prison population in England and Wales more than doubled—with over 4,000 women held in prison. A welcome gradual decline in recent years now risks being reversed.

A series of inquiries and reports over the last twenty years have all concluded that prison is rarely a necessary, appropriate or proportionate response to women who get caught up in the criminal justice system. Furthermore, making up some 5% of the total prison population, women are easily overlooked in policy, planning, and investment in the services that help them to take responsibility and turn their lives around.

As we approach the 10th Anniversary of Baroness Corston’s Report, the rise in the number of self-inflicted deaths in the past year serves as a warning to ministers against complacency. Twelve women took their own lives in 2016, a level last seen just before Corston’s review.