fbpx
Wikipedia

United Kingdom prison population

The United Kingdom has three distinct legal systems with a separate prison system in each: one for both England and Wales, one for Scotland, and one for Northern Ireland. As of June 2023, the United Kingdom has the highest per-capita incarceration rate in Western Europe, at 159 people per 100,000 in England and Wales; 162 people per 100,000 in Scotland; 97 people per 100,000 in Northern Ireland; and the largest prison population in Western Europe.[1][2][3] The average cost per prison place (including all resource expenditure) was £46,696 in England and Wales (2021/22), £46,892 in Scotland (2021/22), and £47,927 in Northern Ireland (2022/23).[1]

As of June 2023, the total UK prison population was 95,526: composed of 85,851 prisoners from England and Wales, 7,775 from Scotland and 1,900 from Northern Ireland.[1] At the end of 2022, there were 81,806 prisoners in England and Wales.[4]

Demographics edit

People from ethnic minority backgrounds edit

People of minority ethnicities (BAME) constitute 13% of the general population, but make up 27% of the prison population.[1] In 2017, a review led by David Lammy MP concluded that the justice system was biased against this group, and required reform.[5] In 2019, Lammy expressed deep concern at the high proportion of BAME males in young offender institutions with 51% of boys in young offender institutions identifying as BAME, saying that "England and Wales are now hitting an American scale of disproportionality in our youth justice system".[6] The over-representation of the black population in prisons may be a result of stop and search, custodial remands and the make-up of the prison population itself with 32% of all children in prison being black.[7]

Prison Population by Ethnic Group as of 31 December 2022[8]
Position Ethnic group Prison
population
Per cent of
incarcerated population
Per cent of
population (2021 Census)[9]
1 White 58,747 71.8% 81.7%
2 Black or Black British 10,173 12.4% 4.0%
3 Asian or Asian British 6,556 8.0% 9.3%
4 Mixed 4,024 4.9% 2.9%
5 Other ethnic group 1,474 1.8% 2.1%
Unrecorded 629 0.8%
Not stated 203 0.2%
Total (2022) 81,806 100% 100%

Notes:
2021 Census, England and Wales only

Religious group edit

In the two decades since 2002, the proportion of Christian prisoners has fallen, by 14%, to 44% of the incarcerated population meanwhile the proportion of Muslim prisoners has risen, by 10%, to 18%. Other religious groups did not see a significant change in proportion.[1] Beginning in 2008, concerns over the spread of Sharia in British prisons, including the operation of Sharia courts and the forced conversions of non-muslims, have been reported.[10][11][12][13] According to the UK prison officers' union in 2013, some Muslim prisoners in the UK had allegedly forcibly converted fellow inmates to Islam in prisons.[14] There have been multiple cases of non-muslim prisoners threatened with violence[15] with "convert or get hurt" being a commonly used phrase by Muslim gangs according to an independent report published by the government.[16] In category A and B prisons, former inmates have publicly spoken out on the rise of Islamism with the "balance of power" in reputational violence now shifted towards Muslim gangs.[17] Other reasons why inmates may convert include wanting protection in wings where Muslim gangs are prevalent, the ability to go to chapel, and access to different foods. Around 1 in 5 Muslim prisoners in the UK are now white.[18]

The Fishmonger's Hall, Streatham, and Reading attacks brought increased attention on the risk of Islamist gangs and convicted terrorists radicalising other inmates in prisons.[19][20] Concerns were first raised in 2010 by the Royal United Services Institute over the growing radicalisation of Muslims in prisons.[21] According to Jonathan Hall KC, the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, convicted terrorists "enjoy high status" in prisons and other inmates are attracted to their extremist interpretation of Islam.[22][23] The 2023 CONTEST report found that Islamic terrorists represented 64% of those in custody for terrorism-connected offences with 44% of declared terrorist attacks in the UK since 2018 perpetrated by serving or recently released Muslim prisoners.[24] Attempts to engage imprisoned terrorists with de-radicalisation programmes have been largely unsuccessful.[25]

Prison Population by Religious Group as of 31 December 2022[26]
Position Religious group Prison
population
Per cent of
incarcerated population
Per cent of
population (2021 Census)[27]
1 Christianity 36,638 44.8% 46.2%
2 No religion 25,446 31.1% 37.2%
3 Islam 14,445 17.7% 6.5%
4 Other religious group 2,035 2.5% 0.6%
5 Buddhism 1,647 2.0% 0.5%
6 Sikhism 493 0.6% 0.9%
7 Judaism 474 0.6% 0.5%
8 Hinduism 348 0.4% 1.7%
Not recorded 276 0.3% 6.0%
Non recognised 4 0.0%
Total (2022) 81,806 100% 100%

Notes:
2021 Census, England and Wales only

Immigrants and foreign nationals edit

71,722 British nationals were recorded in the prison population at the end of 2022. The remainder of the population was made up of 9,797 foreign nationals, making up 12% of the total population, with 287 having no nationality recorded.[28]

Foreign Nationals in the Prison Population as of 31 December 2022
Position Nationality status Prison population Per cent of Total
1   Albania 1,317 13.4%
2   Poland 804 8.2%
3   Romania 781 8.0%
4   Ireland 607 6.2%
5   Lithuania 395 4.0%
6   Jamaica 390 4.0%
7   Pakistan 277 2.8%
8   Somalia 272 2.8%
  Portugal 272 2.8%
10   Iraq 230 2.3%
11   India 227 2.3%
12   Iran 210 2.1%
13   Nigeria 203 2.1%
14   Afghanistan 175 1.8%
15   Vietnam 152 1.6%
All other nationalities 3,485 35.6%
Total (2022) 9,797 100%

Notes: Data for England and Wales only

Age group edit

Age Groups in the Prison Population as of 30 June 2023[29]
Position Age group Prison population Per cent of Total
1 30–39 28,524 33.1%
2 40–49 17,174 20.0%
3 25–29 13,332 15.5%
4 50–59 9,081 10.6%
5 21–24 8,258 9.6%
6 60–69 3,954 4.6%
7 18–20 3,299 3.8%
8 70 and over 1,903 2.2%
9 15–17 326 0.4%
Total (mid–2023) 85,851 100%

Notes: Data for England and Wales only

Children and young people aged under 18 are not sent to adult prisons if they are sentenced to custody.[30] They either go to young offender institutions (for prisoners aged 15–21), secure training centres (for those aged under 17) or secure children's homes (for those aged under 15).[30]

The number of children in custody has declined since mid-2008, from more than 3,000 to about 900 at any one time.[31] In 2019 an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse published a report that described the scale of alleged abuse in young offender institutions and secure training centres as “shockingly high”.[31]

The number of British prisoners over 60 years of age rose by 130% between 2002 and 2013, a shift attributed to an increase in the convictions for historic sex abuse. The increase was reported after the 2012 commencement of Operation Yewtree, a police investigation into sexual abuse allegations—predominantly the abuse of children—against the British media personality Jimmy Savile and others.[32] In relation to over 4,000 over-60 prisoners in UK prisons, Professor David Wilson of Birmingham City University stated in July 2014:

Four out of 10 of these prisoners (the over-60s) were convicted of sex offences and people over 60 are the fastest growing age group in the prison estate, yet there is no national strategy for the elderly who get sent to prison ... The Prison Service needs to develop a strategy to cope with this fastest growing section of the prison population or they will simply be failing in their duty of care to the elderly people that they are locking up.[32]

In 2018 there were more than 1,500 prisoners over 70, including more than 200 aged over 80, creating increasing demands on health and social care systems.[33]

Gender edit

3,107 women were recorded in the prison population (3.8%) as of the end of 2022.[4] As of 2018, most were serving time for non-violent offences.[34] There is evidence that women may be a particularly vulnerable prison population: they account for 20% of self-injury behind bars, and are twice as likely to report mental health issues as male prisoners.[35] In 2018 the government launched a new Female Offender Strategy to try and address the needs of this particular population.[34]

Women with a child aged under 18 months old may apply to bring their child into prison with them, if they are serving a short sentence.[36] Women who give birth in prison may keep their baby for the first 18 months in a mother and baby unit.[36]

Prison population edit

Veterans edit

A growing number of British prisoners are former armed forces members. According to a study reported in the Guardian in 2009, 8500 former servicemen were imprisoned, making up almost 10% of the prison population.[37]

Scotland edit

Scotland recognized the growth in the prison population and acted accordingly to make adjustments to how the law was carried out so that the system operates efficiently. One of the actions made was to decrease the number of stop-and-searches and between the period of June 2015 and August 2016, there was reportedly an 81% decrease in those actions when statistics from 2014 were compared.[38]

Drug abusers edit

The proportion of prisoners developing a drug abuse problem while incarcerated rose from 8.4% in 2013-2014 to nearly 15% in 2018–2019. Much of the prison system is badly equipped to disrupt illegal drug supply and security standards vary between prisons. Reform maintains prisons are overcrowded, staff retention is poor and using community sentences instead of prison for minor offenses would help. Aidan Shilson-Thomas of Reform said, “There must always be a place in prison for those who commit serious crimes. However, prison must also be an opportunity for inmates to change their behaviour. Stabilising the system means stemming the flow of drugs, reducing overcrowding, fixing the crumbling estate and improving officer retention. Its long-term sustainability requires a serious conversation about how many people we lock up and for how long. Failing to act will mean poorer social outcomes, more reoffending and ultimately huge costs to the taxpayer.”[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Sturge, Georgina. "UK Prison Population Statistics" (PDF). House of Commons Library. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
  2. ^ Highest to Lowest. World Prison Brief (WPB). Use the dropdown menu to choose lists of countries by region or the whole world. Use the menu to select highest-to-lowest lists of prison population totals, prison population rates, percentage of pre-trial detainees/remand prisoners, percentage of female prisoners, percentage of foreign prisoners, and occupancy rate. Column headings in WPB tables can be clicked to reorder columns lowest to highest, or alphabetically. For detailed information for each country click on any country name in lists. See also the WPB main data page and click on the map links and/or the sidebar links to get to the region and country desired.
  3. ^ "Britain has the highest prison population in the EU". The Times. 3 April 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Offender management statistics quarterly: July to September 2022". gov.uk. Ministry of Justice. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  5. ^ "Bias against ethnic minorities 'needs to be tackled' in justice system". BBC News. 8 September 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  6. ^ Grierson, Jamie (29 January 2019). "More than half of young people in jail are of BME background". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  7. ^ "Ethnicity and the Criminal Justice System, 2020". gov.uk. Ministry of Justice.
  8. ^ "Table 1.4: Prison population by ethnic group and sex". gov.uk. Ministry of Justice. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  9. ^ "Population of England and Wales". gov.uk. Office for National Statistics. 22 December 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  10. ^ Doward, Jamie (25 May 2008). "Muslim gangs 'are taking control of prison'". The Guardian.
  11. ^ "Muslim gangs imposing sharia law in British prisons". The Telegraph. 15 March 2010.
  12. ^ "'Sharia courts' in British prisons". BBC News. 2 June 2016.
  13. ^ "End of Sharia courts in jail: Crackdown on terrorists radicalising prisoners behind bars". LBC. 27 April 2022.
  14. ^ Withnall, A. (20 October 2013). "Britain's jails facing 'growing problem' of forced conversion to Islam, officers warn". The Independent. UK.
  15. ^ Ford, Richard (7 June 2019). "Muslim gangs 'beat prisoners' who will not convert to Islam". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  16. ^ Bloom, Colin. "Does government 'do God?' An independent review into how government engages with faith" (PDF). gov.uk. Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  17. ^ "Muslims have won power battle between prison gangs, says hero of London Bridge attack". The Telegraph. 2 April 2024.
  18. ^ "One in five Muslim prisoners is white as 'gangs drive conversions'". The Telegraph. 19 March 2024.
  19. ^ Dearden, Lizzie (25 September 2018). "How British prisons became a breeding ground for Islamist extremism". The Independent.
  20. ^ "Prison terrorism: Warnings over failure to stop radicalisation". BBC News. 27 April 2022.
  21. ^ "UK faces new wave of homegrown attacks - report". Reuters. 26 August 2010.
  22. ^ "Terrorism offenders 'enjoy high status' in prison, QC's official report says". The Guardian. 27 April 2022.
  23. ^ Hall, Jonathan. "Terrorism in Prisons" (PDF). gov.uk.
  24. ^ "CONTEST: The United Kingdom's Strategy for Countering Terrorism 2023" (PDF). gov.uk. Home Office. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  25. ^ Hymas, Charles (9 August 2022). "Islamic terrorists 'refuse to be deradicalised in prison'". The Telegraph.
  26. ^ "Table 1.5: Prison population by religion and sex". gov.uk. Ministry of Justice. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  27. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  28. ^ "Table 1.7: Prison population by nationality status and sex, 31 December 2022". gov.uk. Ministry of Justice. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  29. ^ "Table 1.3: Prison population by type of custody, age and sex". Ministry of Justice. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  30. ^ a b "Young people in custody". Gov.uk. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  31. ^ a b Robert Booth, Eric Allison (28 February 2019). "More than 1,000 claims of child sexual abuse in custody, inquiry reveals". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  32. ^ a b Jamie Doward and Gaby Bissett (6 July 2014). "Rolf Harris leaves behind gilded lifestyle for vulnerable prison unit". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  33. ^ "Could elderly prisoners move into secure care homes?". Inside Time. 30 January 2018. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
  34. ^ a b Ministry of Justice (27 June 2018). "Secretary of State launches dedicated strategy to 'break the cycle' of female offending". Gov.UK.
  35. ^ Jessica Labhart, Lisa Wright (29 September 2018). "Why doesn't prison work for women?". BBC News.
  36. ^ a b "Prison Life". Gov UK. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  37. ^ Travis, Alan (25 September 2009). "Revealed: the hidden army in UK prisons". The Guardian. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 25 September 2009.
  38. ^ Who’s in Prison? A Snapshot of Scotland’s Prison Population. The Scottish Centre for Crime & Justice Research, 2015, Who’s in Prison? A Snapshot of Scotland’s Prison Population, www.sccjr.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/SCCJR-Whos-in-prison.pdf.
  39. ^ Proportion of UK prisoners with drug problem doubles in five years – study The Guardian

External links edit

  • HM Prison Service - England and Wales
  • Scottish Prison Service

united, kingdom, prison, population, united, kingdom, three, distinct, legal, systems, with, separate, prison, system, each, both, england, wales, scotland, northern, ireland, june, 2023, united, kingdom, highest, capita, incarceration, rate, western, europe, . The United Kingdom has three distinct legal systems with a separate prison system in each one for both England and Wales one for Scotland and one for Northern Ireland As of June 2023 the United Kingdom has the highest per capita incarceration rate in Western Europe at 159 people per 100 000 in England and Wales 162 people per 100 000 in Scotland 97 people per 100 000 in Northern Ireland and the largest prison population in Western Europe 1 2 3 The average cost per prison place including all resource expenditure was 46 696 in England and Wales 2021 22 46 892 in Scotland 2021 22 and 47 927 in Northern Ireland 2022 23 1 As of June 2023 the total UK prison population was 95 526 composed of 85 851 prisoners from England and Wales 7 775 from Scotland and 1 900 from Northern Ireland 1 At the end of 2022 there were 81 806 prisoners in England and Wales 4 Contents 1 Demographics 1 1 People from ethnic minority backgrounds 1 2 Religious group 1 3 Immigrants and foreign nationals 1 4 Age group 1 5 Gender 2 Prison population 2 1 Veterans 2 2 Scotland 2 3 Drug abusers 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksDemographics editPeople from ethnic minority backgrounds edit See also Race and crime in the United Kingdom People of minority ethnicities BAME constitute 13 of the general population but make up 27 of the prison population 1 In 2017 a review led by David Lammy MP concluded that the justice system was biased against this group and required reform 5 In 2019 Lammy expressed deep concern at the high proportion of BAME males in young offender institutions with 51 of boys in young offender institutions identifying as BAME saying that England and Wales are now hitting an American scale of disproportionality in our youth justice system 6 The over representation of the black population in prisons may be a result of stop and search custodial remands and the make up of the prison population itself with 32 of all children in prison being black 7 Prison Population by Ethnic Group as of 31 December 2022 8 Position Ethnic group Prison population Per cent of incarcerated population Per cent of population 2021 Census 9 1 White 58 747 71 8 81 7 2 Black or Black British 10 173 12 4 4 0 3 Asian or Asian British 6 556 8 0 9 3 4 Mixed 4 024 4 9 2 9 5 Other ethnic group 1 474 1 8 2 1 Unrecorded 629 0 8 Not stated 203 0 2 Total 2022 81 806 100 100 Notes 2021 Census England and Wales only Religious group edit In the two decades since 2002 the proportion of Christian prisoners has fallen by 14 to 44 of the incarcerated population meanwhile the proportion of Muslim prisoners has risen by 10 to 18 Other religious groups did not see a significant change in proportion 1 Beginning in 2008 concerns over the spread of Sharia in British prisons including the operation of Sharia courts and the forced conversions of non muslims have been reported 10 11 12 13 According to the UK prison officers union in 2013 some Muslim prisoners in the UK had allegedly forcibly converted fellow inmates to Islam in prisons 14 There have been multiple cases of non muslim prisoners threatened with violence 15 with convert or get hurt being a commonly used phrase by Muslim gangs according to an independent report published by the government 16 In category A and B prisons former inmates have publicly spoken out on the rise of Islamism with the balance of power in reputational violence now shifted towards Muslim gangs 17 Other reasons why inmates may convert include wanting protection in wings where Muslim gangs are prevalent the ability to go to chapel and access to different foods Around 1 in 5 Muslim prisoners in the UK are now white 18 The Fishmonger s Hall Streatham and Reading attacks brought increased attention on the risk of Islamist gangs and convicted terrorists radicalising other inmates in prisons 19 20 Concerns were first raised in 2010 by the Royal United Services Institute over the growing radicalisation of Muslims in prisons 21 According to Jonathan Hall KC the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation convicted terrorists enjoy high status in prisons and other inmates are attracted to their extremist interpretation of Islam 22 23 The 2023 CONTEST report found that Islamic terrorists represented 64 of those in custody for terrorism connected offences with 44 of declared terrorist attacks in the UK since 2018 perpetrated by serving or recently released Muslim prisoners 24 Attempts to engage imprisoned terrorists with de radicalisation programmes have been largely unsuccessful 25 Prison Population by Religious Group as of 31 December 2022 26 Position Religious group Prison population Per cent of incarcerated population Per cent of population 2021 Census 27 1 Christianity 36 638 44 8 46 2 2 No religion 25 446 31 1 37 2 3 Islam 14 445 17 7 6 5 4 Other religious group 2 035 2 5 0 6 5 Buddhism 1 647 2 0 0 5 6 Sikhism 493 0 6 0 9 7 Judaism 474 0 6 0 5 8 Hinduism 348 0 4 1 7 Not recorded 276 0 3 6 0 Non recognised 4 0 0 Total 2022 81 806 100 100 Notes 2021 Census England and Wales only Immigrants and foreign nationals edit 71 722 British nationals were recorded in the prison population at the end of 2022 The remainder of the population was made up of 9 797 foreign nationals making up 12 of the total population with 287 having no nationality recorded 28 Foreign Nationals in the Prison Population as of 31 December 2022 Position Nationality status Prison population Per cent of Total1 nbsp Albania 1 317 13 4 2 nbsp Poland 804 8 2 3 nbsp Romania 781 8 0 4 nbsp Ireland 607 6 2 5 nbsp Lithuania 395 4 0 6 nbsp Jamaica 390 4 0 7 nbsp Pakistan 277 2 8 8 nbsp Somalia 272 2 8 nbsp Portugal 272 2 8 10 nbsp Iraq 230 2 3 11 nbsp India 227 2 3 12 nbsp Iran 210 2 1 13 nbsp Nigeria 203 2 1 14 nbsp Afghanistan 175 1 8 15 nbsp Vietnam 152 1 6 All other nationalities 3 485 35 6 Total 2022 9 797 100 Notes Data for England and Wales only Age group edit Age Groups in the Prison Population as of 30 June 2023 29 Position Age group Prison population Per cent of Total1 30 39 28 524 33 1 2 40 49 17 174 20 0 3 25 29 13 332 15 5 4 50 59 9 081 10 6 5 21 24 8 258 9 6 6 60 69 3 954 4 6 7 18 20 3 299 3 8 8 70 and over 1 903 2 2 9 15 17 326 0 4 Total mid 2023 85 851 100 Notes Data for England and Wales onlyChildren and young people aged under 18 are not sent to adult prisons if they are sentenced to custody 30 They either go to young offender institutions for prisoners aged 15 21 secure training centres for those aged under 17 or secure children s homes for those aged under 15 30 The number of children in custody has declined since mid 2008 from more than 3 000 to about 900 at any one time 31 In 2019 an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse published a report that described the scale of alleged abuse in young offender institutions and secure training centres as shockingly high 31 The number of British prisoners over 60 years of age rose by 130 between 2002 and 2013 a shift attributed to an increase in the convictions for historic sex abuse The increase was reported after the 2012 commencement of Operation Yewtree a police investigation into sexual abuse allegations predominantly the abuse of children against the British media personality Jimmy Savile and others 32 In relation to over 4 000 over 60 prisoners in UK prisons Professor David Wilson of Birmingham City University stated in July 2014 Four out of 10 of these prisoners the over 60s were convicted of sex offences and people over 60 are the fastest growing age group in the prison estate yet there is no national strategy for the elderly who get sent to prison The Prison Service needs to develop a strategy to cope with this fastest growing section of the prison population or they will simply be failing in their duty of care to the elderly people that they are locking up 32 In 2018 there were more than 1 500 prisoners over 70 including more than 200 aged over 80 creating increasing demands on health and social care systems 33 Gender edit 3 107 women were recorded in the prison population 3 8 as of the end of 2022 4 As of 2018 most were serving time for non violent offences 34 There is evidence that women may be a particularly vulnerable prison population they account for 20 of self injury behind bars and are twice as likely to report mental health issues as male prisoners 35 In 2018 the government launched a new Female Offender Strategy to try and address the needs of this particular population 34 Women with a child aged under 18 months old may apply to bring their child into prison with them if they are serving a short sentence 36 Women who give birth in prison may keep their baby for the first 18 months in a mother and baby unit 36 Prison population editVeterans edit A growing number of British prisoners are former armed forces members According to a study reported in the Guardian in 2009 8500 former servicemen were imprisoned making up almost 10 of the prison population 37 Scotland edit Scotland recognized the growth in the prison population and acted accordingly to make adjustments to how the law was carried out so that the system operates efficiently One of the actions made was to decrease the number of stop and searches and between the period of June 2015 and August 2016 there was reportedly an 81 decrease in those actions when statistics from 2014 were compared 38 Drug abusers edit The proportion of prisoners developing a drug abuse problem while incarcerated rose from 8 4 in 2013 2014 to nearly 15 in 2018 2019 Much of the prison system is badly equipped to disrupt illegal drug supply and security standards vary between prisons Reform maintains prisons are overcrowded staff retention is poor and using community sentences instead of prison for minor offenses would help Aidan Shilson Thomas of Reform said There must always be a place in prison for those who commit serious crimes However prison must also be an opportunity for inmates to change their behaviour Stabilising the system means stemming the flow of drugs reducing overcrowding fixing the crumbling estate and improving officer retention Its long term sustainability requires a serious conversation about how many people we lock up and for how long Failing to act will mean poorer social outcomes more reoffending and ultimately huge costs to the taxpayer 39 See also editList of countries by incarceration rateReferences edit a b c d e Sturge Georgina UK Prison Population Statistics PDF House of Commons Library Retrieved 17 October 2023 Highest to Lowest World Prison Brief WPB Use the dropdown menu to choose lists of countries by region or the whole world Use the menu to select highest to lowest lists of prison population totals prison population rates percentage of pre trial detainees remand prisoners percentage of female prisoners percentage of foreign prisoners and occupancy rate Column headings in WPB tables can be clicked to reorder columns lowest to highest or alphabetically For detailed information for each country click on any country name in lists See also the WPB main data page and click on the map links and or the sidebar links to get to the region and country desired Britain has the highest prison population in the EU The Times 3 April 2019 a b Offender management statistics quarterly July to September 2022 gov uk Ministry of Justice Retrieved 18 April 2023 Bias against ethnic minorities needs to be tackled in justice system BBC News 8 September 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2019 Grierson Jamie 29 January 2019 More than half of young people in jail are of BME background The Guardian Retrieved 31 March 2019 Ethnicity and the Criminal Justice System 2020 gov uk Ministry of Justice Table 1 4 Prison population by ethnic group and sex gov uk Ministry of Justice Retrieved 18 April 2023 Population of England and Wales gov uk Office for National Statistics 22 December 2022 Retrieved 18 April 2023 Doward Jamie 25 May 2008 Muslim gangs are taking control of prison The Guardian Muslim gangs imposing sharia law in British prisons The Telegraph 15 March 2010 Sharia courts in British prisons BBC News 2 June 2016 End of Sharia courts in jail Crackdown on terrorists radicalising prisoners behind bars LBC 27 April 2022 Withnall A 20 October 2013 Britain s jails facing growing problem of forced conversion to Islam officers warn The Independent UK Ford Richard 7 June 2019 Muslim gangs beat prisoners who will not convert to Islam The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Bloom Colin Does government do God An independent review into how government engages with faith PDF gov uk Department for Levelling Up Housing amp Communities Retrieved 26 April 2023 Muslims have won power battle between prison gangs says hero of London Bridge attack The Telegraph 2 April 2024 One in five Muslim prisoners is white as gangs drive conversions The Telegraph 19 March 2024 Dearden Lizzie 25 September 2018 How British prisons became a breeding ground for Islamist extremism The Independent Prison terrorism Warnings over failure to stop radicalisation BBC News 27 April 2022 UK faces new wave of homegrown attacks report Reuters 26 August 2010 Terrorism offenders enjoy high status in prison QC s official report says The Guardian 27 April 2022 Hall Jonathan Terrorism in Prisons PDF gov uk CONTEST The United Kingdom s Strategy for Countering Terrorism 2023 PDF gov uk Home Office Retrieved 18 July 2023 Hymas Charles 9 August 2022 Islamic terrorists refuse to be deradicalised in prison The Telegraph Table 1 5 Prison population by religion and sex gov uk Ministry of Justice Retrieved 18 April 2023 Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved 29 November 2022 Table 1 7 Prison population by nationality status and sex 31 December 2022 gov uk Ministry of Justice Retrieved 18 April 2023 Table 1 3 Prison population by type of custody age and sex Ministry of Justice Retrieved 27 July 2023 a b Young people in custody Gov uk Retrieved 31 March 2019 a b Robert Booth Eric Allison 28 February 2019 More than 1 000 claims of child sexual abuse in custody inquiry reveals The Guardian Retrieved 31 March 2019 a b Jamie Doward and Gaby Bissett 6 July 2014 Rolf Harris leaves behind gilded lifestyle for vulnerable prison unit The Guardian Retrieved 7 July 2014 Could elderly prisoners move into secure care homes Inside Time 30 January 2018 Retrieved 14 February 2018 a b Ministry of Justice 27 June 2018 Secretary of State launches dedicated strategy to break the cycle of female offending Gov UK Jessica Labhart Lisa Wright 29 September 2018 Why doesn t prison work for women BBC News a b Prison Life Gov UK Retrieved 31 March 2019 Travis Alan 25 September 2009 Revealed the hidden army in UK prisons The Guardian pp 1 2 Retrieved 25 September 2009 Who s in Prison A Snapshot of Scotland s Prison Population The Scottish Centre for Crime amp Justice Research 2015 Who s in Prison A Snapshot of Scotland s Prison Population www sccjr ac uk wp content uploads 2015 10 SCCJR Whos in prison pdf Proportion of UK prisoners with drug problem doubles in five years study The GuardianExternal links editHM Prison Service England and Wales Scottish Prison Service Northern Ireland Prison Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United Kingdom prison population amp oldid 1217546523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.