1 / 20

Women in t he Criminal Justice System

Women in t he Criminal Justice System. INSPIRE Sophie Gibson 21 st May 2014. The Inspire Partnership - Brighton. Inspire Partnership Pan Sussex. Inspire client profile. Vulnerable women with multiple complex needs Present with needs in at least two of the nine pathways

rufin
Download Presentation

Women in t he Criminal Justice System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Women in the Criminal Justice System INSPIRE Sophie Gibson 21st May 2014

  2. The Inspire Partnership - Brighton

  3. Inspire Partnership Pan Sussex

  4. Inspire client profile • Vulnerable women with multiple complex needs • Present with needs in at least two of the nine pathways • Between 66% and 75% of clients experience domestic violence • 73% suffer from anxiety, depression and isolation • 62% lacked skills in education, training and employment

  5. Nine pathway needs • Accommodation • Education, training and employment • Drugs and alcohol • Health • Finance, benefit and debt • Children and families • Attitudes, thinking and behaviour • Supporting women who have been abused, raped and /or experiencing DV • Supporting women who have been/ are involved in sex working

  6. Women in Criminal JusticeEngagement with Inspire • Early diversion – from Police Custody/court • Alternative to Custody – Specified Activity Requirement individual and group programmes • In-reach • Through The Gate (TTG) post prison support

  7. Early Diversion • Voluntary engagement • PCLDS– multi agency scheme with Police, Probation, Health and voluntary sector • Need for gender responsive approach • Dedicated Liaison and Diversion Inspire case-worker • Inspire Liaison coordinator

  8. Community Orders • 60% of case load • Usually 3, 10 or 20 sessions • With or without probation supervision • A mix of 1:1 and group work • Close links with Offender Manager (OM) in Probation

  9. In-reach • Designated case-worker • Monthly visits to HMP Bronzefield • Identifies needs pre-release • Accommodation – between 70-80% women have need

  10. Through The Gate (TTG) • Women sentenced to less than 12 months in custody • No statutory probation supervision – due to change • Challenges of limited accommodation and benefit delays • First 48 hours post release are crucial • Lack of clothing and basic needs

  11. Strategic Aims • To reduce re-offending • To reduce the number of women in custody • To reduce inter-generational crime

  12. The Inspire Journey • Evidence based approach of ‘what works’ • Holistic and integrated model • Low self-esteem and vulnerability • Importance of being listened to • Wrap-around case work support • Underpinned by relational therapeutic model of support and challenge that recognises impact of trauma • Emotional and practical support • Further disclosures as trust builds • Women only safe space

  13. Partnership working • Co-located workers with specialist knowledge. • Clients access specialist support on site • Sharing specialist knowledge within the Inspire team • Strategic specialist input and support • Clients fast-tracked to other services partners provide • Clarity of roles between Inspire and Probation reinforces boundaries

  14. Reducing the number of women in custody and reducing intergenerational crime • Magistrate awareness • Disproportionate impact on family when mother imprisoned • Children and Families Pathway • Hidden sentence training

  15. Inspire achievements 2013/14 • 147 women were referred to Inspire • 79% successfully completed their orders • Six of nine pathways exceeded targets • Inspire mentoring service launched to ‘bridge’ access to other services • Initiated open access drop-in to offer additional support • Inspire rolled to five additional hubs in E and W Sussex • Re-unite funding to support women be re-united with children post custody

  16. The Future - HOPES • Greater Service user participation and voice • Increase capacity to support women to access primary and sexual health services • Increase services delivering co-located surgeries specifically housing and ISVA support • Support young women offenders transitioning to adult services • More integrated work with children’s services

  17. The Future – CHALLENGES • Changing landscape with Transforming Rehabilitation • The need for gender responsive services • Greater understanding on the impact of domestic and sexual violence on women’s offending and breach rates. • Lack of women only supported accommodation

  18. ‘I have been around the system a lot and this is a much better option for women’. ‘Inspire is the best thing to have happened to me in years’ ‘Now I know I’m not worthless’

  19. References • The Corston Report (2007) • Inspire Social Return on Investment (SROI) with New Economics Foundation (nef) (2011) • Hedderman C, Gunby C & Shelton N (2011) What women want:The importance of qualitative approaches in evaluating work with women offenders. • Gelsthorpe L (2011)Working with women offenders in the community • Pollack S (2011) Gender responsive discourses • What Works to Reduce Reoffending: A Summary of the Evidence Justice Analytical Services Scottish Government 2011 • Women’s Community Services: A Wise Commission:nef (2012)

  20. Contact Information • Sophie Gibson • Inspire OperationalManager • Inspire, Brighton Women’s Centre • 01273 698036 Ext 3 • Email: sophiegibson@womenscentre.org.uk

More Related