Thursday, May 7, 2020
Domestic Circumstances, Domestic Violence, Child Care...
â⬠¢ ââ¬ËDomestic circumstances, domestic violence, child care issues and single parents â⬠¢ Personal circumstances, mental health issues, low self-esteem, eating disorders and substance misuse â⬠¢ Socio economic, poverty, isolation and unemploymentââ¬â¢ (Corston Report, 2007, pg2) Baroness Corston insists that just one or a combination of these categories, will ultimately lead to ââ¬Ëcrisis pointââ¬â¢ and the individual in question will no doubt end up within the Criminal Jus-tice System. This was mirrored throughout her report and was met by other contributing fac-tors. Baroness Corston also believed that women and men are different and, if equal out-comes are required, acknowledged that different treatments should be targetted. The brunt of the reportâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦Following the Corston report, there were 43 recommendations made, relating to issues of im-provement to prison conditions, sanitation etc and efforts to help women, who are at high risk of reoffending. These covered general support needed for women offenders; improvement to their health services; community sentences to be used as the norm instead of automatic imprisonment; the specific development of a wider support networks. These recommenda-tions will be further discussed within the discussion section of this dissertation. This will be done in the context of a follow-up report that was issued five years after Baroness Corstonââ¬â¢s original report was published. Fawcett Society In 2004 the Fawcett Society was established to help seek broad equality for women within society. During 2004 they also formed a commission to help develop an understanding of the status of women within the Criminal Justice System. This dissertation will analyse the infor-mation provided from the second annual report, which gave aspects of the Judicial System that clearly identified women offenders as being far more vulnerable than men. From 1995-2005 there has been more severe sentencing by courts which has had a detri-mentally disproportionate effect on numbers of women being
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