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Deputy Mayor sets out plan to reduce female offending

Created on
17 July 2019

Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime sets out plan to reduce female offending and improve services for women prisoners in London

The Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime, Sophie Linden, set out a new vision today for transforming how the criminal justice system works with female offenders in London.

Speaking at the Advance Women’s Centre in north east London, the Deputy Mayor introduced the ambitious Blueprint for Women – a new plan which aims to tackle the root causes of offending, prevent reoffending and ensure women have the support they need after leaving prison.

Women are more likely than men to be sent to prison for a first-time offence(1)and women in prison are highly likely to have been victims of serious crime themselves - more than half of women in prison report having experienced emotional, physical or sexual abuse as a child and more than half have experienced domestic violence(2).

The Blueprint will ensure women are connected with mental health services, ensure appropriate safeguarding measures are in place, help women to build supportive relationships and to ensure a smooth transition into safe accommodation when leaving prison.

A key commitment in the Mayor’s Policing and Crime Plan, the Blueprint for Women will provide a more co-ordinated approach, bringing together the police, prisons, local authorities and rehabilitation organisations to better meet the needs of women and girls in the prison system.

The Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime will fund an innovative pilot project to work with women who have committed lower level offences such as theft to divert them from the criminal justice system and on to a more positive path. They will be referred to support services for their individual needs, such as mental health or substance misuse, and offered help finding jobs and accommodation.

A number of organisations are currently working together to deliver the Blueprint, including the Prison Reform Trust, the Metropolitan Police, NHS England, the National Probation Service, the London Community Rehabilitation Company, London Councils, Lambeth Council, Women in Prison, Advance and Hibiscus.

Sophie Linden, Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime, said: “We know that women serving prison sentences need specific support in order to turn their lives around. Women in prison are likely to be victims as well as offenders and their experiences and needs have been overlooked for far too long.

“I am pleased today to set out a new way forward. The Blueprint for Women means we can ensure that women in London’s prison system are able to access support across a range of areas and services. Working together we can tackle the root causes of their problems and drive down reoffending, cut crime and make our communities safer.”

Jenny Earle, Transforming Lives Programme Manager at the Prison Reform Trust said: “Since the closure of HMP Holloway in 2016 we have been working with MOPAC and other London stakeholders to reduce the number of women unnecessarily imprisoned far from home, separated from their children, often losing their homes and jobs and exacerbating other underlying problems. Many have been victims of worse offences than those for which they are imprisoned, and joined up working is key.

“Congratulations therefore to London’s Deputy Mayor of Policing and Crime, Sophie Linden, on today’s launch of a pan-London plan to improve criminal justice responses to women. The culmination of extensive consultation, this Blueprint signals a determination to stop the waste of women’s lives and put in place the community based solutions to women’s minor offending that the evidence supports. Early intervention, police diversion and community sentences deliver better outcomes for children, families and communities as well as women themselves. With sustained political leadership, multi-agency collaboration and increased investment in women’s support services, this Blueprint marks a great step forward for justice in London.”

Niki Scordi, Chief Executive of Advance, said: “We welcome the Mayor of London’s commitment to transform the criminal justice response to women in London. The Blueprint for Women recognises that systemic change requires a coordinated community response by statutory, voluntary and other justice organisations. The Blueprint also acknowledges that community-based alternatives to custody, like Advance’s Minerva service and Women Centres, are the appropriate response to women in contact with the criminal justice system, most of whom have committed non-violent offences. It is also what women with lived experiences tell us, that specialist services which put women at the centre, deliver the most positive outcomes for them, their children and communities, towards breaking the cycle of re-offending and re-victimisation.”

Cllr Jas Athwal, Executive for Crime and Public Protection, London Councils, said: “Women in the criminal justice system are amongst the most vulnerable groups in our society. We know there are usually complex causes behind their offending, such as experiences of domestic abuse, homelessness, mental health and substance use. The London Blueprint sets out a path to transform how agencies in London can work together to help divert women away from prison to community-based support.

“Local authorities have an important role in this and helping to ensure that women and their families can get the critical help they need at the right time. I would encourage boroughs to sign up to and support this important vision, and look forward to working with other London partners in taking this forward.”

Notes to editors

 

1 Ministry of Justice (2018) Offender management statistics quarterly: January to March 2018

2 Ministry of Justice (2012) Prisoners’ childhood and family backgrounds and Provision for Women offenders in the community: Fawcett Society

 

Notes to editors

 

The Blueprint builds on extensive work already underway with female offenders in London. MOPAC has invested £4.6 million over three years in the Advance Minerva and South London Alliance Female Offender Projects, which provide expert support to women in 21 London boroughs to reduce offending, provide keyworker support and mentoring, and increase women centre provisions:https://www.london.gov.uk/press-releases/mayoral/mayors-10m-for-new-projects-to-prevent-crime

 

The Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime is providing £400,000 funding for the Diversion pilot project.

 

The Mayor of London has announced an additional £15 million investment to help services that support women and girls who have been the victim of violence in London:https://www.london.gov.uk/press-releases/mayoral/mayors-15m-boost-to-tackle-violence

 

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