Meeting of the Parliament 28 January 2015
When the Angiolini report was published, the then justice secretary, Kenny MacAskill, called it a
“compelling vision for the future.”
The centrepiece of the report was that Cornton Vale should not be replaced by a like-for-like facility but that a new approach should be taken—one that moved away from retribution and imprisonment and towards a focus on female-specific needs and rehabilitation. In practice, that new approach was to manifest itself in the creation of a new, smaller, specialist prison for long-term prisoners and those who present a significant risk to the public. The change was to be rooted in a focus on what is right and what works, and in an understanding of the comparatively low risks that women offenders pose to society and of what drives women’s offending and reoffending.
There is an abundance of evidence that imprisoning women achieves little. In this country, three quarters of the custodial sentences that are imposed on women are for six months or less, but short prison sentences demonstrably do not reduce reoffending by women.