Women in Prison: Causes, Conditions, and Consequences Around the World (Panel Discussion and Report Launch)

5/14

Open to the public

There has been an increase in the rate of women’s imprisonment in many countries around the world.  Yet many countries fail to adequately address the unique issues raised when women are deprived of their liberty.  The panelists will discuss the causes of the increase in rates of imprisonment, including the global war on drugs and drug use.  They will also address the conditions of women’s imprisonment, such as lack of gender-specific healthcare, shackling during childbirth, and sexual violence in prisons.   The increase in women's imprisonment impacts children and families.  To address this, some countries such as Argentina have prisons where children up to 4 years old can live with their mothers.  What are the benefits and challenges of this? What are the alternatives to this?  The panel will discuss issues relating to women’s imprisonment from an international and comparative perspective.  What can countries learn from each other’s practices?  To what extent are the Bangkok Rules recently adopted by the UN being implemented in women's prisons around the world?  The findings and recommendations from the human rights clinics' research on Argentina will also be discussed.  

Moderator:  Rashida Manjoo, UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences

Speakers: 

  • Mikhail Golichenko, Senior Policy Analyst, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
  • Andrea Huber, Policy Director, Penal Reform International (London)
  • Sital Kalantry, Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the International Human Rights Clinic, University of Chicago Law School
  • Silvia Martinez, Director of the Prison Commission of the Public Defender’s Office in Argentina, Argentina,
  • Gail Smith, Founder and Senior Policy Director, Chicago Legal Advocacy for Incarcerated Mothers


Student speakers:

  • Jullia Park, J.D. Candidate, 2014, University of Chicago Law School
  • Jamie Stinson, J.D. Candidate 2014, Cornell Law School


*Students who have class at 1.25 pm are also welcome to attend and feel free to depart quietly for class

On the occasion of the public launch of a report conducted by the Cornell Law School’s Avon Global Center for Women & Justice and International Human Rights Clinic and the University of Chicago International Human Rights Clinic in coordination with the Defensor del Pueblo de la Nación Argentina (Public Defender), a panel discussion will be held on the topic of women in prison.

Open to the public and lunch will be provided but seats are limited.