Reference list: “Children in the prison nursery” context: Global progress in adopting the Convention on the Rights of the Child in alignment with United Nations minimum standards of care in prisons.

Van Hout, Marie Claire ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0018-4060, Fleißner, Simon, Klankwarth, Ulla-Britt and Stöver, Heino (2022) Reference list: “Children in the prison nursery” context: Global progress in adopting the Convention on the Rights of the Child in alignment with United Nations minimum standards of care in prisons. [Data Collection]

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Abstract

This dataset is a reference list for journal article titled: “Children in the prison nursery” context: Global progress in adopting the Convention on the Rights of the Child in alignment with United Nations minimum standards of care in prisons.

Background: Out of the 11 million detained in prisons globally, the female prison population of 740,000 has increased by 50% since 2000. 410,000 children are in detention. 19,000 live in prison with their mother.
Objective: To conduct a socio legal assessment of global progress in adopting the Convention on the Rights of the Child since 2010, and alignment with United Nations (UN) normative standards of care in prisons.
Participants and Setting: Children detained with their mothers at the global level.
Methods A comprehensive search of all published Concluding Observation reports of the UN Committees on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), Against Torture (CAT) and Human Rights (CCPR) since 2010 (n=905). 316 CRC, 246 CEDAW, 173 CAT and 170 CCPR reports were scrutinised to examine the situation of children living with incarcerated mothers against UN normative standards of care.
Results 51 reports (24 CRC, 13 CEDAW, 12 CAT, 2 CCPR) representing 43 countries (majority in Africa) contained direct violations of the best interests of the child. These include the treatment of children as prisoners, difficulties in securing identity documents, poor detention conditions, exposure to violence, lack of access to child-appropriate healthcare, and lack of transparent data. Countries differed in durations of time permitting children to stay in prison (6 months to 8 years, with Eritrea observing no limit).
Conclusions Achieving a balance between protection of the child and punishment of the mother is inconsistent globally, and exacerbates the multiple vulnerabilities of the child.

Creators: Van Hout, Marie Claire, Fleißner, Simon, Klankwarth, Ulla-Britt and Stöver, Heino
ORCID: ORCID logohttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0018-4060UNSPECIFIEDUNSPECIFIEDUNSPECIFIED
Uncontrolled Keywords: children in detention, female prison population, rights of the child
DOI: https://doi.org/10.24377/LJMU.d.00000114
Division: Public Health Institute
Field of Research: Health sciences > Public health
Law and legal studies > Legal systems > Youth justice
Date Deposited: 22 Apr 2022 08:30
Last Modified: 22 Aug 2024 10:01
Temporal coverage:
FromTo
January 2010March 2022
URI: https://opendata.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/114
Resource language: English
Metadata language: English
Collection period:
FromTo
February 2022March 2022

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