VulnerableGroups HandbookCoverIn November 2014, the Center for the Study of Democracy, jointly with Droit au Droit (Belgium), University of Applied Sciences and Arts – Dortmund (Germany), Observatory on the Penal System and Human Rights (Spain) and Law Institute of Lithuania (Lithuania) published the study "Vulnerable groups of prisoners. A Handbook".

In prison, certain groups of inmates are subject to disadvantages due to specifics of their origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, etc. These groups usually need special treatment, which is not always provided, which leads to unequal treatment and violation of their rights.

This handbook examines the situation of such vulnerable groups within the prison systems of Belgium, Bulgaria, Germany, Lithuania and Spain. Starting from the classification of the UN Handbook on Prisoners with special needs and looking at the different national contexts, the authors identify different groups as vulnerable in different countries. In order to encompass as many groups as possible, their list was extended to include some particularly marginalised groups, such as sex offenders, prisoners with disabilities, etc.

Each group is viewed in context, explaining the situations of vulnerability both generally and in the selected countries. From one side, the handbook presents the efforts for compensation of vulnerabilities in every country available in the legislation or provided by prison authorities or other actors. From the other side, it identifies the gaps in the measures and practices, which vary both from country to country and from group to group. 

This study is a part of the "Re‐Socialisation of Offenders in the European Union: Enhancing the Role of the Civil Society" project, implemented with the support of the European Commission, Directorate‐General Justice. It aims at improving the situation in prisons and the re-socialization of offenders by exploring three aspects – promoting  the broader use of alternatives to imprisonment; improving the situation of specific groups of vulnerable inmates; and designing an instrument for regular prison monitoring.

 

 

 

Authors:

  • Alejandro Forero Cuéllar, Observatory on the Penal System and Human Rights of the University of Barcelona, Spain
  • María Celeste Tortosa, Observatory on the Penal System and Human Rights of the University of Barcelona, Spain
  • Klaus Dreckmann, Observatory on the Penal System and Human Rights of the University of Barcelona, Spain
  • Dimitar Markov, Center for the Study of Democracy, Sofia, Bulgaria
  • Maria Doichinova, Center for the Study of Democracy, Sofia, Bulgaria

 

Country national reports, serving as a basis for this study, were prepared by Nicola Giovannini, Malena Zingoni, Droit au Droit, Belgium; Dimitar Markov, Maria Doichinova, Center for the Study of Democracy, Bulgaria; Christine M. Graebsch, Sven-U. Burkhardt and Martin von
Borstel, Dortmund University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Germany; Gytis Andrulionis, Renata Giedrytė and Simonas Nikartas, Law Institute of Lithuania, Lithuania; and Alejandro Forero Cuéllar, María Celeste Tortosa, Iñaki Rivera Beiras, Josep M. García-Borés, Observatory
on the Penal System and Human Rights of the University of Barcelona, Spain.

The publication can be retrieved in full text here:

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The publication is also available in French and Lithuanian