Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Avant-propos
- Acknowledgements
- Remerciements
- Contents
- Part I Introductory Synthesis and Analyses: 1ÈRE Partie Synthèse ET Analyses Introductives
- Part II Themes: 2ÈME Partie Thèmes
- Part III National Reports: 3ÈME Partie Rapports Nationaux
- Women in prison in Argentina
- Women in prison in Australia
- Women in prison in Austria
- Women in prison in Brazil
- Women in prison in England and Wales
- Women in prison in Finland
- Femmes en prison en France
- Women in prison in Germany
- Women in prison in Greece
- Women in prison in Ireland
- Femmes en prison en Italie
- Women in prison in the Netherlands
- Women in prison in New Zealand
- Women in prison in Poland
- Women in prison in Portugal
- Women in prison in Russia
- Women in prison in South Africa
- Women in prison in Spain: their criminological and social invisibility
- Femmes en prison en Suisse: la situation des femmes prévenues et condamnées
- Women in prison in Taiwan
- Women in prison in Thailand: implementation of the UN Bangkok Rules in the Thai criminal justice system
- Femmes en prison en Turquie
- Women in prison in the USA
- Appendix The Bangkok Rules: Annexe Règles De Bangkok
- The International Penal and Penitentiary Foundation: History and Purpose
Women in prison in Ireland
from Part III - National Reports: 3ÈME Partie Rapports Nationaux
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 September 2018
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Avant-propos
- Acknowledgements
- Remerciements
- Contents
- Part I Introductory Synthesis and Analyses: 1ÈRE Partie Synthèse ET Analyses Introductives
- Part II Themes: 2ÈME Partie Thèmes
- Part III National Reports: 3ÈME Partie Rapports Nationaux
- Women in prison in Argentina
- Women in prison in Australia
- Women in prison in Austria
- Women in prison in Brazil
- Women in prison in England and Wales
- Women in prison in Finland
- Femmes en prison en France
- Women in prison in Germany
- Women in prison in Greece
- Women in prison in Ireland
- Femmes en prison en Italie
- Women in prison in the Netherlands
- Women in prison in New Zealand
- Women in prison in Poland
- Women in prison in Portugal
- Women in prison in Russia
- Women in prison in South Africa
- Women in prison in Spain: their criminological and social invisibility
- Femmes en prison en Suisse: la situation des femmes prévenues et condamnées
- Women in prison in Taiwan
- Women in prison in Thailand: implementation of the UN Bangkok Rules in the Thai criminal justice system
- Femmes en prison en Turquie
- Women in prison in the USA
- Appendix The Bangkok Rules: Annexe Règles De Bangkok
- The International Penal and Penitentiary Foundation: History and Purpose
Summary
INTRODUCTION
A key feature of the imprisonment of women in Ireland is that the rate of imprisonment is growing, and that sentences tend to be short. Historically, the subject of the imprisonment of women in Ireland was neglected, and the first purpose-built prison for women was not constructed until 1999. More recently, increasing levels of overcrowding in the two prisons for women in Ireland and deteriorating conditions have given rise to concerns about the treatment of women in prison and the need to increase resort to alternatives to custody. The statutory agencies in charge of prisons and probation in Ireland have, however, recently published a joint strategy aimed at addressing some of these issues.
Ireland has a history of detaining women in institutions outside the formal criminal justice system, particularly where the women involved had children outside of marriage or were deemed to have offended the moral codes of a conservative society in some way. That history, which is only now coming to light and being come to terms with in Ireland, must be acknowledged, but it does not constitute the subject of this report.
INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC HUMAN RIGHTS FRAMEWORK
Ireland is a member of the United Nations (since 1955), was a founding member of the Council of Europe (in 1949) and is a member of the European Union (since 1973). Ireland became a contracting party to the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) on 23 December 1985, and to the United Nations Optional Protocol to CEDAW on 7 September 2000. No reservations have been entered by Ireland to these Conventions. Ireland is a dualist country.
Ireland is not a party to the Council of Europe's Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence. While domestic violence against women has been considered under Ireland's reporting requirements arising from CEDAW, and Ireland has a National Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Investigation Unit within the police force, the issue of factors leading to women's involvement in crime and those leading to their imprisonment have yet to be addressed specifically.
The Irish Constitution (Bunreacht na hÉireann), dating from 1937, also contains enumerated and unenumerated rights.
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- Women in PrisonThe Bangkok Rules and Beyond, pp. 479 - 512Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2017