WOMEN BEHIND BARS IN GREECE*
MUJERES TRAS LAS REJAS EN GRECIA
MULHERES ATRÁS DAS GRADES NA GRÉCIA
Effi Lambropouloua
elambro@panteion.gr Fecha de recepción: 01 de diciembre de 2015 Fecha de revisión: 17 de marzo de 2016 Fecha de aceptación: 26 de marzo de 2016
ABSTRACT
The article refers to the circumstances of female prisoners in Greece after 1980 and the next decades, taking into account the UN Bangkok Rules of 2010.
The findings are mainly based on national and European statistics, watchdogs’ reports, as well as press releases and strategy plans of prison officers’ and prosecutors’ unions.
According to our findings, women have slightly higher crime rates at younger ages than in the past, and generally the type of crimes they commit has changed.
As for the prison organization and living conditions of female prisoners, the main problems are the unequal division of personnel in the two prisons examined, the chronic understaffing of specialized
*Article of scientific investigation that shows the situation of female prisoners in Greece after 1980 and for the next decades, in the context of the international Rules for their Treatment and in particular the UN Bangkok Rules of 2010. The research has been carried out for the International Penal and Penitentiary Foundation (IPPF; Berne, Switzerland) in 2014, updated, reviewed and restructured for Mision Juridica in spring 2016.
a.Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences; School of Sociology and Psychology. LL.L (Athens, Greece), Postgraduate Studies in Sociology of Criminal Law (Univ. of Bielefeld), and Ph.D. in Criminology (Univ. of Freiburg i.Br., Germany). Visiting Fellowship at the University of Cambridge. Main research, publications and courses: Social control, corrections,
MISIÓN JURÍDICA
Revista de Derecho y Ciencias Sociales Bogotá, D.C. (Colombia)
Colaboradores Externos Internacionales Núm. 12 Año 2017
Enero - Junio, pp.
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and healthcare personnel, the poor training and pessimistic attitudes of prison officers, and the inadequate operation of training and education programmes connected to their reintegration. However, the greatest challenges in today’s correctional facilities is security and the prevalence of narcotics in the prison. Therefore, advanced security systems, as well as discreet surveillance and body scanning are absolutely necessary to prevent the contraband.
Prison authorities and the Ministry of Justice are aware of the gender specific issues and sensitive to these. What is missing is a radical reform of prison management and modernisation in the whole correctional system of the country without abandoning its leniency and boosting the confidence of the staff in order to help them support the prisoners.
Moreover, there is still time for the organisation and promotion of an “early warning system” in order to stop an increase in females’ criminality and their rates in prison population.
KEY WORDS
Female prisoners’ rates; sentencing policy; time in prison; Human Rights; prison staff; aftercare.
RESUMEN
Este artículo trata las circunstancias de mujeres prisioneras en Grecia después de 1980 y las siguientes décadas teniendo en cuenta las reglas de Bangkok de Naciones Unidas de 2010.
Los resultados están principalmente basados en estadísticas nacionales y europeas, informes de guardianes, además de comunicados de prensa y planes estratégicos de la fiscalía y funcionarios de prisiones.
De acuerdo con nuestros hallazgos, las mujeres tienen una tasa de delincuencia ligeramente más elevada y a una más edad temprana que en el pasado; generalmente el tipo de crímenes que cometen ha cambiado.
Respecto de la organización de la prisión y las condiciones de vida de las reclusas mujeres, los principales problemas son la división desigual de personal en las dos prisiones examinadas, la constante falta de personal especializado y de
atención sanitaria, el escaso entrenamiento y las actitudes pesimistas de los funcionarios de prisión, así como el funcionamiento deficiente de programas de capacitación y educación vinculados con su reinserción. Sin embargo, los mayores retos en los establecimientos penitenciarios actuales son la seguridad y el predominio de narcóticos en la prisión. Por lo tanto, sistemas de seguridad de avanzada, además de una vigilancia prudente y escaneado corporal son absolutamente necesarios para prevenir el contrabando.
Autoridades penitenciarias y el Ministerio de Justicia están al tanto de las problemáticas específicas del género y son sensibles a éstas. Lo que falta es una reforma radical en la dirección de la prisión y la modernización de todo el sistema penitenciario del país sin dejar de lado su indulgencia y, estimular la confianza del personal para ayudarlos a respaldar a las prisioneras.
Además, todavía hay tiempo para la organización y promoción de un “Sistema de alerta temprana” para frenar el incremento en la criminalidad femenina y su porcentaje dentro de la población carcelaria.
PALABRAS CLAVES
Tasa de mujeres en prisión, leyes de sentencia, tiempo en prisión, Derechos Humanos, personal penitenciario, reinserción.
RESUMO
O artigo
Os resultados
De acordo com nossos resultados, as mulheres têm um pouco mais elevadas índices de criminalidade em idades mais jovens do que no passado, e geralmente mudou o tipo de crimes que cometeram.
Quanto à organização da prisão e das condições de vida de mulheres presas, os principais
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problemas são a divisão desigual do pessoal nas duas prisões pesquisadas, a falta crônica de pessoal de especializado e de saúde, o treinamento pobre e atitudes pessimistas dos oficiais da prisão, e a operação inadequada dos programas de treinamento e educação ligados à sua reintegração. No entanto, o maior desafio em estabelecimentos prisionais de hoje é a segurança e a prevalência de narcóticos na prisão. Portanto, avançados sistemas de segurança, bem como a vigilância discreta e corpo digitalização são absolutamente necessários para evitar o contrabando.
As autoridades prisionais e o Ministério da Justiça estão atentos às questões de gênero específico e são sensíveis a estas. O que falta
éuma reforma radical de gestão da prisão e a modernização do sistema correcional do país sem abandonar sua clemência e aumentar a confiança dos funcionários a fim de
Além disso, ainda há tempo para a organização e a promoção de um "sistema de alerta precoce" para evitar um aumento na criminalidade das fêmeas e as suas taxas na população carcerária.
Taxas dos prisioneiros femininos; política de condenação; tempo na prisão; Direitos humanos; agentes penitenciários; cuidados posteriores.
INTRODUCTION
This article discusses the situation of female prisoners in Greece after 1980 and for the next decades.
Our intention is firstly to examine the eventual changes in the types of crimes committed by women and convicted with a prison sentence and their proportion in the prison population during the last thirty years, which includes a period of economic welfare and development (1980s), and a period with the relatively unguarded borders and a high inflow of immigrants (1990s, 2000s). Unfortunately, little data have been published and are available after 2008 or 2010 in order to sufficiently examine the conditions after the beginning of the economic crisis in Greece
operate under the same rules. In accordance with Greek prison regulations, women’s prisons are additionally required to adjust to their gender requirements and corresponding needs. However, gender specific standards have not been issued.
The adoption of the United Nations Rules for the Treatment of Women Prisoners and Non- custodial Measures for Women Offenders (the Bangkok Rules) in December 2010 represented an important step forward in recognising the gender- specific needs of women in criminal justice systems and providing the standards that should be applied in the treatment of such women.
According to Penal Reform International, to Bangkok Rules, because women and girls represent two to ten percent of the global prison population, their characteristics and needs have remained unacknowledged and largely unmet by criminal justice systems. The prison systems, including the physical layout, healthcare provision, family contact and training opportunities, are typically designed with male prisoners in mind (2013, p. 4).
Until the adoption of the Bangkok Rules, international standards had not properly reflected the specific needs of girls and women, both in regard to the conditions of detention and to alternatives to imprisonment. The Bangkok Rules are also the first international instrument which specifically addresses the issue of the children of female prisoners. All UN member states are encouraged to implement the Bangkok Rules in the administration of penal institutions, and to consider incorporating them in relevant legislation. Nonetheless the rules are not binding instruments that states sign and ratify. Therefore, countries are not legally obliged to comply with them, even after endorsing them.
The present article will initially outline the International and National Human Rights protection for female prisoners in Greece, as well as certain issues referring to criminal law and criminal procedure law and the followed sentencing policy. Further on, the proportion of women that are counted in official crime rates and in prison populations according to their offense during the study time will be examined. The criminal career and social profile of convicted women, as well as the sentences they serve will be sketched out. Moreover, issues of prison life, such
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as healthcare, drug rehabilitation programmes, safety and security, incarcerated women residing with their children in prison, contact with the outside world, and aftercare will be presented, taking into account the reports of European and national watchdogs and the context of Bangkok Rules (hereinafter: BkR). Finally, a short assessment of the situation of female prisoners will be carried out and open issues to improve their treatment will be presented.
1.Sources, methods and limitations of the study
The findings of this study are based on three lines of evidence. The first source is official
crime and prison data (ELSTAT) - provided by the Ministry of Justice, police records, population (ELSTAT,
The second source of the study are all primary research publications referring to imprisoned and released women and publications on the blog operated by the correctional personnel and convicted women of one of the two women’s prisons.
The third source are international organisations’ or European reports such as the Eurostat Yearbook (2015a), the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the European Committee for the Prevention on Torture (CPT), documents of the Greek Centre of Gender and Equality Studies, articles in the Press, releases of the Prison Officers’ Federation (Correctional Officers and External Prison Guards), as well as of Prosecutors’ Association (EEE).
2. Results
From our research we found that in Greece, the proportion of women included in official crime rates and prison population statistics shows an increasing trend since the 1990s.
Women have slightly higher conviction rates at younger ages
crimes’ i.e. building regulations; violations against labour welfare legislation: insurance and pension funds etc., and second are crimes in relation to the performance of the official duties of civil servants (e.g. bribery), public order offences, and absconding (or the attempt to abscond) from prison.
The proportion of imprisoned women in the total prison population shows a small increase after 1990, reaching the highest levels in 2000 and 2005. The rates of female prisoners compared to the total female population also rise.
Not only is the commitment of women to criminality higher than before 1990s, but also their participation in all prison sentences, from short to long, in relation to the men. In general, women serve at a higher rate than men a short sentence of up to three years, probably related to the severity of their crimes. The rates of women serving a sentence over 10 years to life have been constantly decreasing during the last three decades, while the rates of men show a gradual increase up to six percent.
An increasing trend is also apparent in the imprisonment of young females with a rise in absolute numbers between 1998 and 2001 - which however remain low (until 1997,
As for the prison organisation and living conditions of female inmates the main problems are the unequal division of personnel in the two prisons examined, the chronic understaffing with specialised and health care personnel and the inadequate operation of training and education programmes for the female inmates.
The briefing of prisoners by the admission staff relative to the dangers of denying health screens, including for sexually transmitted diseases or
Despite the long existing drug sensitisation, mobilisation and rehabilitation programmes
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for female prisoners, a separate unit or facility for detoxification of substance abusers is still unavailable (BkR, 15).
The Greek penal system foresees and provides several possibilities for those convicted and serving short sentences not to be imprisoned and it is especially generous to young females (BkR, 65), and mothers with toddlers. As far as juveniles are concerned, the operation of a special department for females is not a solution, because it would be soon filled following the development of the young males’ institutions. Contact with the outside world is more than liberal in relation to other European countries as well (BkR, 26, 27, 28). Humane treatment of all prisoners was and remains at the core of Greek prison policy (see also, although not explicitly, Koulouris & Aloskofis, 2013, p. 31).
Prison authorities and the Ministry of Justice are aware of the gender specific issues and quite sensitive to these. However, the limited training of prison officers, along with general and special security issues that arise is a serious problem for the smooth management of all prisons. They also cause the staff to feel demoralised because they are unable and powerless to adequately deal with prison problems, such as collective disorder and violence. In addition, prison security infrastructure to manage and respond to prison incidents remains basic.
In Greece, the human rights’ legislation for the protection of prisoners and of female prisoners in particular, as well as the supervision of its operation is sufficient. However, much can be done to better comply with the country’s commitments with international law and the Bangkok Rules, and this would require a reform of prison management, investment in training of personnel, as well as in modernisation of prisons’ infrastructure.
3.Research analysis
3.1.International and National Human Rights Framework
Greece is a contracting party to the following international and European human rights treaties and conventions that specifically concern women:
–The UN Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) 1979 – Signature 2 March 1982;
Ratification, Accession(a), Succession(d) 7 June 1983 (Law 1342/1983, Government’s Gazette 39/Α/1983);
–The UN Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
2952/2001, Government’s Gazette 248/Α/2001);
–The CoE Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence 2011, Signature Greece 11 May 2011 (Status as of: 15/10/2013); and
–The UN General Assembly Resolution Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural
rights, including the right to development, in particular 23/...Accelerating efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women: preventing and responding to rape and other forms of sexual violence, Signature Greece 11 June 2013.
These treaties are incorporated into national legal order by the issuing of Laws and Decrees.
As far as other international human rights treaties and conventions are concerned (which are of specific importance to women in prison as
well), Greece is also a contracting party to: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights/UDHR (A/RES/217) (1948); the UN International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights/ICCPR
(1966) and its two Optional Protocols (1966, 1989), Law 2462/1997; the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (1984), Law 1782/1988; the European Convention on Human Rights/ECHR (1950/1953); the
European Convention for the Prevention of Torture (1987); and the European Social Charter (1961).
Fundamental human rights are directly enforceable through the domestic courts. Moreover, the citizens have a right of complaint to an international judicial body a) if they have previously used up all legal means offered by the national law, and b) if a state or if the Greek state has violated some of their rights included in the articles of the European Convention on Human Rights and its Protocols.
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In February 2013 the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women/ CEDAW has visited Greece and in March released its seventh periodic report of Greece adopted by the Committee. More specifically, CEDAW noted the difficult situation faced by women in prison, particularly with regard to severe overcrowding of cells,
The Committee urged Greece to: a) Take measures to reduce the number of women in detention, including through targeted prevention programmes aimed at addressing the causes of women’s criminality; b) Address the situation of women and girls in detention through the development of comprehensive
However, in regard to the above critical points in the CEDAW report (2013), and in particular, the
Concerning now the other point of CEDAW criticism, that “administrative detainees, irregular migrants, refugees and
As far as “the lack of free legal aid” is concerned that CEDAW is critical of, according to Greek law and practice all defendants irrespective of their gender, race etc. have certain rights at the
In “crimes caught in the act” the short time- period s/he is to be brought before the court, limits the defendant’s ability to present an adequate defence. Therefore s/he may request a delay to prepare their defence, and the court is obliged to grant it, but no more than three days (GPPC, Art. 423[1]).
1.Although the law provides for persons in detention to have access to a lawyer from the very beginning of the investigation, the practice is, unfortunately, sometimes different. The CPT, during its 2005 visit, registered a number of allegations according to which the access to a lawyer had been delayed for up to three days (CPT/Inf (2006) 41, par. 39).
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In conclusion, during the
In trial phase, although the law provided for decades the appointment of a counsel
The law also foresees the assignment of an attorney during the court trial for defendants, who do not have the financial means to appoint a lawyer themselves, charged with felonies or misdemeanours of the authority of the three- member court and for all courts of appeal (Art. 7[2]). In addition, they are appointed in criminal proceedings for civil claims of torture victims, as well as for violation of human dignity and several other crime groups, if they are felonies or misdemeanours under the authority of the three- member court for which imprisonment of at least six months is foreseen (Art. 7[3]).
Legal aid is granted by the judge or the president of the district court in which the
case is to be adjudicated or is pending (Law 3226/2004, Arts. 3[1 section a], 6[1], 8[1]). For minors, not only the court but also the prosecutor, the investigating judge or the judicial council can appoint a counsel, if it is regarded as necessary (Art. 3[5] as amended by Law 3625/2007, Art. 6[3]). In issues irrelevant to a trial, legal aid is granted by the
5)(Lambropoulou, 2012, p. 435). Therefore, it is an unreasonable criticism by CEDAW that women, in particular, have limited access to free legal aid. The same applies to the third critical point of CEDAW about the lack of effective judicial review and prolonged arbitrary period of detention of women, because detention is under several forms of review, i.e. automatic, ex officio and by the detainee him/herself (see also Lambropoulou, 2012, pp.
The GPPC foresees two forms of automatic
one year, namely six more months (Art. 287[1]), and the second one is the control of extension or not of the one year to the maximum term of 18 months (Art. 287[2]).
Apart from the automatic control, the suspect/defendant him/herself can initiate
proceedings for release. In particular, the detainee can apply for the revocation or the
replacement of the detention (or the remand on bail/restrictive conditions). The application is to be submitted to the investigating judge up to the end of the inquiry, e.g. up to the time s/ he forwards the file to the prosecutor (GPPC, Art. 286). Yet, it can be applied later, in fact at any time, but not by the accused of drug laws violation, who can submit his request only after two months of the detention enforcement. If his/her request is rejected, s/he can apply again after one month from the previous refusal (Law 1729/1987, Art. 21; Law 3459/2006, Art. 42[2 section b]). At the end of 2009 the previous regulation was fully replaced (Law 3811/2009, Art. 25[4]), with a vague notification according
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to which “the decision for
The detention or the release on bail can be also removed ex officio by the investigating
judge or after the suggestion of the prosecutor (GPPC, Art. 286[1 section a]), or the application of the investigating judge to the judicial council. Additionally, the investigating judge can replace the detention with restrictions and the restrictions with remand (GPPC, Art. 298), justifying in detail his/her order and after the written response of the prosecutor (GPPC, Art. 286[1]). S/he can likewise replace the imposed restrictions with others.
The detainee can lodge an appeal against the decision of the investigating judge who denied his/her application for revocation or replacement to the judicial council, within five days after the announcement of the rejection (GPPC, Art. 286[2 section b]). The rejection of detention’s revocation causes no precedent, thus it can be filed again by the accused as many times as s/he wishes.
The second, and perhaps the primary, procedural alternative which offers the law
to the accused is that s/he may challenge the lawfulness of the warrant of
to the judicial council, which decides definitely on the issue (GPPC, Art. 285[1]). Filing an appeal does not have a suspending effect and after its lodging the investigating judge can continue the inquiry until the judicial council meets its decision (GPPC, Art. 285[2,5]).
Criteria which are taken into account for the review are: the progress of the investigation and the existing of special or general preventive reasons. Several specialists note that the overuse of
very last years often refer to in their information magazines, flyers, and press releases (The Lawyer’s Tribune, 2009, p. 10; Papadamakis, 2004, p. 305; see
also US Department of State 2013/2014, section
1d, p. 8) and that
Criticism on long sentences and remand time, the overcrowding in prisons and detention centres along with the prisoners’ unrests in November 2008, resulted in the issuing of measures and legal amendments (December 2008). The upper level of pretrial detention was reduced from 18 to 12 months for felonies to which a prison sentence of five to ten years is foreseen. For felonies, for which either longer imprisonment (over ten years) or sentenced to life is foreseen, the upper level of pretrial detention didn’t change, since it can be prolonged for six more months as before. However, it was
emphasized that the prolongation refers only to absolutely exceptional cases and to the above
mentioned crimes (GPPC, Art. 287[2]).
In particular, as far as the CEDAW criticism of “prolonged arbitrary detention” concerns, on October 11, 2011 three persons, among them was one woman, accused of serious terrorist crimes were released before the adjudication of their case, exactly because of the completion of their
According to the Greek Constitution
(1975/1986/2001/2008), legislation, measures, policies and good practices apply without differentiation to all people, men
and women (Arts. 4, 5). Any further distinction between imprisoned men and women, or special provisions that are of importance to women in prison are not foreseen by the Constitution.
Prison Law (2776/1999, Art. 3) also forbids any discretionary treatment of the prisoners (or detainees). Special treatment is provided
2.The presumption of innocence places the legal burden on the prosecution to prove all elements of the offence - generally beyond a reasonable doubt: in dubio pro reo - and to disprove all the defence arguments.
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only for juveniles and the mentally ill. However, prison law foresees that female prisoners are strictly separated from men, and prison rules and conditions are adjusted to their gender and corresponding needs.
The Greek Prison Law (GCC) and the Internal Regulation(s) of the prison institutions are generally based on the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (1955), the UN Basic Principles for the Treatment of Prisoners 1990, the European Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners drawn up by the Council of Europe in 1973, the Recommendation Rec. (2006)2, which updated the European Prison Rules in 2006 and replaced the Recommendation No. R (87)3 of the Committee of Ministers of CoE from 1987. Prison Law is also based on special Recommendations of CoE about the pre- trial detention (No. R(80)11), the furloughs (No. R(82)16), the detention and treatment of dangerous offenders (No. R(82)17), the detention of foreign prisoners (No. R(84)12) etc. All these rules constitute the context of prison policy in Greece. The UN Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment 1988 (G.A. res. 43/173), although it has not drawn any special attention to women convicts, it has attracted the great attention of various Greek NGOs and Research Institutions in the country, the media, in particular the Press, and country branches of international organizations to irregular migrants (i.e. UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Amnesty International, Greek Council for Refugees, National Commission for Human Rights), as well as the Greek Ministry of Interior, the Police, and the national Ombudsman’s Office.
3.2. Facts and figures
In Greece 33 correctional institutions are operating in total. Two of them are for women, one for those awaiting their trial (Korydallos/ Pireaus prefecture) and the other one for those convicted (Thiva/Viotia prefecture).
Few women either from Northern or from Southern Greece usually serve their time in one of the male prisons in the north (Diavata/ Thessaloniki) or the south (Neapoli/Crete) of the country respectively, in separate wings, so that they are not far from their homes. The allocation
is also associated with the jurisdiction of the court and the severity of their crime (misdemeanour courts; courts of Appeal in bigger cities).
The female prisons’ capacity is 570 positions; 300 for convicted and 270 for remand. According to the data of the last two years, the occupancy level for both facilities was ranging between +8.4% and +13.5% (2014:
According to the 2011 Census, the “de facto” population in Greece is 10,815,197 residents,
49% male and 51% female (ELSTAT, 2013, p. 1, Table 1).3
The country’s labour force is 4,862,900 people, of whom 27.3% were unemployed in 2013 and 27.8% in 2015 compared with 16.5% in 2011 (ELSTAT, 2014: 8). The unemployment rate is higher for females (2014: 29.6%) than for males (2014: 23.3%) and for the ages 15¬-
24(51.5%), followed by the age groups of
According to the latest Eurostat publications, the average GDP per capita within the EU‒28 in
2012 was PPS €25,500 (Eurostat 2015a, 6.1). For Greece the GDP per inhabitant in PPS is €19,300 (Drettakis, 2014),4 while in accordance with other estimations is lower, ranging between €17,820 and €16,584 (CIA World Factbook, 2015).5
3.According to newer calculations, the population has risen to 10,940,777 (see ELSTAT, 2014: 4). The article is based on the publication of 2013.
4.According to Drettakis’ calculations based on Eurostat.
5.Data are in 2013 US dollar: $23,600 (2013 est.). Therefore, we have calculated the exchange rate parity of the US dollar with Euro in
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3.2.1. Women in detention
Table 1: Women in
Source: ELSTAT, 1970, Table G1, p. 87; ELSTAT,
Note: In 2000, 777 detainees of unknown gender are not included.
*A ‘stock’ variable is measured at one specific time, and represents a quantity existing at that point in time (December 31/January 1 each year)
As we see from the Table 1, the absolute numbers of women detainees at the end of the year have
increased more than six times (17/37 - 269/222). However, their proportion in the detainees’ total follows only a slight but regular upward trend, apart from the high increase in 2000 (17.1%). On the contrary, the
men’s proportion in detention decrease, despite some fluctuations, to reach the lowest values (flow and stock) in 2000 (88.6% and 82.9% respectively) and the highest in 1995 (94.9% and 95.7%).
3.2.2. Women in prison convicted of crime
Table 2a: Convicted women in prison at the end of the year (stock) in time series
Source: ELSTAT,
Notes: Female prisoner’s rate on female population was calculated in 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010 according to census, 1971, 1981, 1991, 2001, 2011, op.cit.; 1985 according to estimated population for 1987 and 1995,
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As we see from Table 2a, the decrease of convicted female prisoner rates from 1970 to 1985 is remarkable. This is due to decriminalisations, higher suspension rates (Arts. 99, 100 Greek Penal Code/ GPC), and lower conversion limits of imprisonment to a punitive fine (GPC, Art. 82[1, 2]).
We also see that the absolute numbers of women prisoners (convicted) after 1990 calculated on a given date (stock, annually on 1st January) increase almost four times, while for men the number doubles and in 2014 triples. Yet, the larger increase has taken place after 2000 for both genders.
The proportion of imprisoned women in the general prison population shows a slight increase after 1990, reaching the highest levels in 2000 and 2005. The rates of female prisoners compared to the total female population also rise from 0.002 in 1990 to 0.008 in 2008.
A similar trend is found on the rates of female prisoners during the course of the whole year (flow) in relation to the total female population, as shown in Table 2b, which rises from 0.006 in 1990 to 0.017 in 2008. Here again, we see that the absolute numbers of women rise regularly, having more than tripled between 1985 and 2008, while that of the men more than double. The female proportion in prison populations increases from 4.4% in 1990 to 9% in 2000, to follow afterwards a slight downward trend ranging from 6.7% to 5.7%.
Table 2b: Convicted women in prison during the whole year (flow*) in time series
Source: ELSTAT,
Notes: Female population in 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010 according to census 1971, 1981, 1991, 2001, 2011 op.cit.; 1985 according to estimated population for 1987 and 1995,
* A ‘flow’ variable is measured over an interval of time, i.e. per unit of time (here a year).
A possible explanation is the more intensive involvement of women in socioeconomic life and their increased opportunities to commit a crime of higher visibility than a decade ago and consequently to be arrested and convicted (see more under 4.2.4). Another reason might be also the situation caused by the successive waves of irregular immigrants that have entered Greece since the early 1990s. According to International Organization for
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detainees) fluctuates between 30% (2007) to 48.4% (2000) of the female prison population during the last 15 years, without showing a clear trend though (ELSTAT, 1998,
According to a 1997 research, the typical female prisoner in the 1990s is: Greek, single, i.e. divorced, a widow, or not married, between the ages of
From the Table 2b, we also see that after 2000 the absolute number of male prisoners are continuously increasing. The increase of women’s numbers had begun previously, in 1995, and has had an intense rise until 2000, to remain stable for five years and start again in 2006 an upward trend in parallel to that of the men and decline both in 2010.
An increasing trend is also found in young females’ imprisonment with the higher rise in rates and absolute numbers between 1998 and 2001, afterwards dropping continuously to increase again after 2008. It has to be taken into account that their numbers are very low (until 1997,
3.2.3.Criminal career and profile of female prisoners
Contrary to the increase of detained and imprisoned women in absolute numbers and rates, the development of convictions does not show a significant rise averaging around 12% during the years
Table 3: Conviction rates of women per age group
Source: ELSTAT,
Notes: Since 2003, age groups of juveniles have changed from
In the first group, a few minors less than 13 years old are also included.
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Women usually start committing crimes, between
Figure 1a: Convicted women per age group
Source: ELSTAT,
6.According to the European Sourcebook of Crime and Criminal Justice Statistics (Aebi et al., 2010, 2014) in 2006, 12.3% among convicted offenders in Greece were females, while in 2010, 11.7% (Table 3.2.2.1).
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The age group of
Summing up, women between
Figure 1b: Convicted men per age group
Source: ELSTAT,
Regarding recidivists, few years are available from the Justice statistics. For those
=
the men it is over 99% of the total (flow) number of prisoners held during the respective years (ELSTAT, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010 Table G6.3 online).
From Table 4 is apparent a remarkable increase in all crime groups committed by women and for which they serve prison sentences after 1999.
7.The European Sourcebook of Crime and Criminal Justice Statistics (op.cit. 2010, 2014) refers that between 2006 and 2011, among convicted prisoners in Greece
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Table 4: Female prisoners (convicted & detainees - flow) according to crime(s) in % related to men, in time series
Source: ELSTAT, Table G1, since 1998 Table G1a online; 2014, Ministry of Justice, op.cit.
Notes: In Violent offences are included: assaults, homicides, domestic violence, child abuse, rape, sexual abuse, as well as
crimes against the public order and religious peace.
In Offences against the public welfare (‘common dangerous crimes’): crimes against the security of traffic and public
welfare (building regulations), violations of the labour welfare legislation (insurance and pension funds).
In Other offences are included: crimes related to obstructing justice (e.g. withholding information, fostering of crimes and/or criminals), court offences (perjury), bribery, extortion, crimes in relation to the security of the State and its international relations, begging (mendicity), some public order offences (using explosives in demonstrations, plundering, harassment by alarming etc.) as well as against political parties, absconding (or attempt) from prison.
In Violations of Special Penal Laws: Violations of antidrug legislation; traffic regulations, market regulations; dishonoured cheques, illicit trade in antiquities, people smuggling etc. In 2014 tax evasion, money laundering and migrant smuggling are specifically mentioned and have also been included.
* In 2010, for Violations of the Military Penal Code 2 persons (33.3%) from total 6.
The highest increase is in a) offences against the public welfare/ ‘common dangerous crimes’ i.e. building regulations; violations of the labour welfare legislation, i.e. insurance and pension funds;
b)the group of ‘other offences’, namely court offences (e.g. withholding information, fostering of crimes and/or criminals; perjury), crimes in relation to the performance of the official duties of civil servants (e.g. bribery), systematic begging (mendicity), and some public order offences (e.g. using explosives in demonstrations, plundering etc.) as well as against political parties (e.g. harassment by
threatening, intimidating, alarming, using explosives), absconding (or attempt) from prison; and
c)the violations of Special Penal Laws, i.e. dishonoured cheques, and drug crimes. The representation of women in drug crimes although doubled after 1995, doesn’t follow the intensive trends of the other two crime groups (‘common dangerous crimes’ and ‘other’ offences).
An increase in the female proportion of crime rates for which are imprisoned, reflects decrease on the males’ representation.7
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A 2006 study in the then single women’s prison of Korydallos (Mitrossyli & Fronimou, 2006) found that women have been imprisoned for three major crime categories with the following order: violations of the antidrug legislation, like the majority of male prisoners (Aloskofis, 2005, p. 42), property crimes, and crimes against life, which in our study are included under violent offences (Mitrossyli & Fronimou, 2006, p. 28). On the contrary, two earlier studies carried out on the same prison in 1995, found that the category of drug crimes were at the third position of offenses for which women ended up in prison (17.9%); crimes against life came first (30.5%) and property crimes second (18.9%) (Thanopoulou et al., 1997, p. 126, p. 295, Table 21; Milioni, 2009, p. 592). The researchers of the 2006 study underline that this change in the leading causes of imprisonment took place within ten years, showing the development of drug crimes into one of the most sensitive issues of contemporary Greek society (Mitrossyli & Fronimou 2006, p. 28). In our study, however, drug crimes come third in the range of crime categories (the majority of violations of Special Penal Laws) for which women are imprisoned (Table 4).
According to our study from the 465 convicted female prisoners in
In summary, the criminal profile of the female prisoner is yet somewhat different, corresponding to that of the 1990s: women convicted for homicide, property offences, and violations of antidrug legislation represent 73.7% of the prison population; serving sentences from
3.2.4. Prison sentences and sentencing policy
Table 5a: Female convicted prisoners according to their sentence (flow) and
in relation to sentences of the total number of prisoners (%), in time series
Source: ELSTAT Table G2, since 1998 Table G6.1 online, op.cit.
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Not only is the commitment of women to criminality higher than before 1990s, but also their participation in all prison sentences, from short to long, in relation to the men.
The only prison sentences with decreasing female rates over the years are the longest ones, i.e. those over ten years to life. While in 1980 their rate was 9.6%, in 1990 it decreased to 6.4%, in 2000 it went further down to 3.9% and in 2010 to 3.7% after a slight rise between 2006 and 2008). This can be associated with the type of crimes committed by women, as it is presented in Table 4. Up to the 1990s, according to Justice Statistics, female prisoners with long sentences usually had committed property or violent offences, while afterwards we see that the proportion of women in violent and property offences has not significantly increased, and both are crime groups of which they have the lower rates (Table 4).
The study of Thanopoulou and associates in 1997 referred to above (4.2.2) found that the majority of crimes committed by the women in 1973, 1983 and 1993 was begging, “honour crimes”– mostly insult and slander, court offences
– mostly perjury, property crimes – forgery, thefts,
embezzlement, and crimes against personal freedom – snatch and illegal detention, mostly of their own children if they are divorced or have lived separately from their husband. The conviction rates of women, in general, ranged from
As already mentioned, in our study the participation of women in ‘common dangerous crimes’, drug offences, violations of market regulations etc. is higher after 1999. Moreover, the representation of women in drug crimes although doubled after 1995, doesn’t follow the intensive trends of the other two crime groups (‘common dangerous crimes’ and ‘other offences’).
According to the same authors, the majority of women (45.3%) serve long sentences (over 5 to 20 years), which is not the case for men, 29.5% of which serve a prison sentence up to five years and 13.5% a life sentence (Thanopoulou et al., 1997, p. 126; Fronimou, 2000, p. 369). In the present study we found however, that women serve at a higher rate than men short sentences up to six months, which has increased significantly in the years 1995- 2000 and then diminished, to rise in turn the group of those serving a prison sentence from
Table 5b: Female convicted prisoners according to their sentence each year (flow) in % in time series
Source: ELSTAT, Table G2, since 1998 Table G6.1 online.
Note: *2014 stock (Ministry of Justice).
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In general, women serve at a higher rate than men a short sentence of up to three years, probably related to the severity of their crimes. The rates of women serving a sentence over 10 years to life have been constantly decreasing during the last three decades, while the rates of men show a slight gradual increase
This is also verified when comparing the proportion of sentences’ length that women have served in the same year (Table 5b) and not only in comparison with the men. The females’ rates with
the number of young females serving a sentence in a closed institution is very small, we see a fluctuating increase after 2000. Furthermore, although the number of young females serving a sentence in a closed institution is very small, we see a fluctuating increase after 2000.
Due to the small number of female juvenile offenders a separate institution does not exist and these offenders have been serving their time since 2008 in the prison at Thiva, while previously in the single female prison (Korydallos). In January 2014, ten young females were serving their sentence in the above prison. Male juvenile offenders, on the other hand, were held at the juvenile reformatory in Korydallos prison complex until it ceased operating in 1996, and were then transferred to the prison in the Avlona/Voiotia prefecture. The Closed Juvenile Institution column in Tables 5a and 5b corresponds to the definition in the Penal Code.
Table 6: Rates of young females and males in closed institutions according to the length of their sentences and in relation to the total number of young prisoners each year (time series)
Source: ELSTAT, Table G2, and G09.2 online
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The rates of juveniles in closed institutions according to the length of their sentences and in relation to the total number of young prisoners each year are presented on Table 6 below. 1998 is the first time that there has been such an increase in the imprisonment of young females, where from one in 1995 they rose to 61 persons. The development of sentencing does not show significant changes during the course of time. In 1998 their rate of imprisonment up to six months corresponds to 4.9% of the total prison sentences for juveniles, decreasing after 2001 until 2008. The representation of young females serving a prison sentence over five years in 2008 with a rate of 3% and in 2010 with 3.6% to the total number of juveniles imprisoned this year is remarkable. The image is different for the young males with an increasing proportion in high sentences over five years after 1998, but also an increase in short sentences of up to six months after the decrease between 1990 and 1999.
In summary, on the basis of available information the main female prisoner characteristics during the last fifteen years can be outlined as following:
She is of Greek nationality (ELSTAT, 1985, 1990, 1995, Table G1;
3.3.Time in prison: treatment and human rights in action
3.3.1.General treatment policy
For decades the general prison policy and the treatment of prisoners by the custodian personnel is leniency. For example, frequent contact with the outside world (visits, correspondence, telephone, information from the Press, TV privileges),
free movement inside the prison, and since the late 1980s the early grant of furloughs, the possibilities for graduate studies, the “school(s) of second chance” (see below, 4.3.2), as well as the overall efforts of the whole prison staff to overcome shortages and face adequately the rapidly changing situation with good will and understanding are some of their “best” practices. This is a primary reason why even citizens of European countries prefer to serve their sentences in Greek prisons than in their own countries despite overcrowding, and the shortcomings of the facilities. However, tolerance and leniency cannot always and for everyone be a substitute for the existing failings of the system, because it can result in exorbitant demands or expectations of the prisoners and lead to “corruption of authority” of the prison staff.
Humane treatment of all prisoners cannot be regarded stricto sensu as an operational
best practice, but it is still the core of treatment corresponding to clemency characterising the justice system and the country’s population. The international obligation that all persons under any form of detention shall be treated in a humane manner (ICCPR, Art. 10, Part III), and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person is expressly codified in Prison Law 2776/1999 (Arts. 2, 3, 4) and in the Constitution (Art. 7[2]).
All prisoners,
3.3.2.Treatment of specific groups
Juvenile female prisoners stay in the same part of the prison where pregnant women and mothers with children are. Juvenile female prisoners can attend school or whatever form of public education (technical school, university) outside prison, if they have passed the relevant examinations, unless this is not permitted for security reasons. In such a case they can attend an
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In order to motivate prisoners to attend educational courses, one school (working) day is counted as two days of the prison sentence served (GCC, Art. 46[2]). Although there is a general shortage of jobs, the prospect of “beneficial counting” (Decree 11.3.1926) still is not enough of an incentive to make prisoners, and juveniles in particular, eager to participate in school. The same applies for recreational activities, and if left alone, there is a general reluctance and passivity.
Work and education in prison are provided on a voluntary basis (Greek Constitution 1975/1986/2001/2008, Art. 22[4]; cf. ECHR 1950, Art. 4[3a]). The efforts of convincing prisoners fall to prison staff, specialised personnel and primarily to teachers who fight for this on a daily basis.
Since 2009 certain measures had been taken to improve the everyday life of female juveniles (e.g. access to school, dance classes and a painting workshop) and their living conditions (yard renovation, equipment installation for playing basketball and volleyball) (CPT/Inf (2012) 1, par. 62).
Staff specifically assigned to juveniles i.e.
a
A special area in women prisons is available to mothers with their children up to the age of
three. Afterwards the children go mostly to the father and grandparents or to a close relative who is willing and regarded by the court and welfare service as a suitable guardian for the child. Otherwise, lacking a suitable family environment, the child is sent to a childcare institution (e.g. SOS Children’s Villages, children’s homes), which is under the supervision of the Ministry of Health and Welfare. The decision lies with the judge after the parents’ hearing (GCC, Art. 13[3]).
Prisoners in Greece are generally not chained, especially when a woman is in labour; only in extraordinary cases where a person is in danger of harming her(him)self or others and for a short period of time.
The wing where mothers and children stay has better detention conditions (lighting, ventilation,
heating, cells with bright and pleasant colours) prevailing in relation to the main prison and have more comfort in terms of space, no less than 40 cubic metres. Each cell is planned for the accommodation of two mothers with their children, although due to prison overcrowding this number is surpassed (see also Mitrossyli & Fronimou, 2006, p. 46) The prisoners could stay in public areas for longer periods of time, and often take their children to the courtyard of the building where a playground has been made for them.
In January 2014, 18 (2.9%) women with their children (20) were in the Prison at Thiva and one in the prison of Korydallos with one child. In November 2006, 16 mothers were housed in the (then) single prison, including convicts and detainees, with 17 children (op.cit.)
Institutionalization is a real threat to children who are together with their mothers in prison. Deficits or disabilities in social and life skills might develop in the future and this is the main reason that a child cannot stay longer in the institution with its mother, after the age of three. During their prison stay they may regularly spend a few days at a time outside the prison with grandparents, brothers and sisters of their mother, father, etc., by decision of the prison council and suggestion of social workers to counterbalance prison life.
Previously and for some years, the Social Service of the prison provided for the children each morning, in cooperation with Korydallos Municipality, a roundtrip to the local public nursery especially for them. This had a positive effect on the children, because they were associating with their peers and experienced a normal social environment outside prison for the needs of their age, even if only for a few hours each day.
Later a kindergarten was built within the prison walls, exclusively for the children of the prisoners, thus depriving the toddlers of contact with the outside world. In 2003, the nursery closed, due to absence of children above the age of nine months. Subsequent attempts of the Social Service to transfer daily the few children to a nursery, as in the past, were unsuccessful due to lack of transport means and high costs (Mitrossyli & Fronimou, 2006, p. 46).
In November 2006, two mentally ill women (0.35% of the 559 absolute total of female
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prisoners that represents 5.6% of the total prison population)0 were serving a sentence placed there by a criminal court for the offense of manslaughter because of reduced imputation. A psychiatrist visited the prison twice a week. In a crisis, they are referred to a public psychiatric hospital (Mitrossyli & Fronimou, 2006, p. 2).
According to information from the Prison Director in March 2014 and the Director of the
Prison Hospital of Korydallos, in the facility for convicted females in Thiva there were four mentally
ill women kept separate from the rest of the women under medication, because the psychiatric hospital of the prison complex is full of men.9
The Greek Penal code follows a
public order, irrespective of the imputation (“imputability”) of the defendant. They are either a
substitute for the main penalties for those people not being criminally responsible or for the criminally responsible an adjunct to the main penalties. Even if the number of disturbed women is not high, it is a sad situation that they cannot be admitted in the mental hospital. Since 2011
medicine for all women who need such aid has been operated successfully by an NGO (Klimax) with the
support of the Ministries of Justice and Health in the prison for convicted women at Thiva.
Concerning drug addicts, the treatment programmes that are offered in prisons for substance abuse are dry, i.e. without substitutes (methadone, buprenorphine). The internal logic of the programmes is that only in free society detoxification can be completed. Thus, female drug addicts participate in the “sensitization and mobilization” programmes provided in prison by the Therapy Centre for Dependent Individuals (KETHEA) and “Over
Since 2006 KETHEA has also started to offer psychiatric and physical support (phase B) for
8.We couldn’t verify what is meant by “mentally ill”, people suffering from psychoses and other serious mental problems or psychological problems, more or less severe, and drug addicts.
9.Telephone call at the Prison Director of women’s prison in Thiva and a meeting with the Director of the Prison Hospital.
detoxification in both females’ prisons, and reintegration support (phase C) for released persons in its Athens centre facility (KETHEA, 2006/2007, p.
have joined the therapeutic programme (KETHEA en drasi/in action).
Despite the operating drug policy and programmes in female penitentiaries (1988),
CPT underlined in 2011 the general absence of a coherent and comprehensive drug policy in the prisons. CPT recommended, in particular, immediate steps for introducing a
In conclusion, those that are mentally ill and drug addicts are two groups that need special treatment and separation from the rest of the prison population. A new wing or some more rooms in the psychiatric hospital for men must be made available for the treatment of these women that have mental or serious psychological problems. Near the women’s prison in Thiva is a detoxification centre which is only for convicted men; it seems practical and cost effective to establish a wing for female drug and alcohol abusers, too. Nonetheless, a new centre, again for males, has been recently opened in the north of the country. 10
10.The detoxification centre opened on November 2nd, 2015 in the prison of Diavata.
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3.3.3.Health care in prison
According to Prison Law (Arts. 23, 24) and internal Prison Regulation (MD 58819/2003, Art. 10), within the first two days upon entering the prison, the person is medically screened, in particular for cardiological and psychological problems, and infectious diseases (HIV, Hepatitis etc.). In addition, screening aims at discovering whether there were any drugs or other medication issues. In the case that the inmate is suffering from an infectious disease s/he is accommodated in a special part of the prison or they are usually transferred to the hospital. Prisoners are obliged but they cannot be coerced to undergo a medical screening or examination upon entering or during their stay in prison. The CPT has verified cases where inmates refuse to undergo examination, expressing however its concern whether these prisoners were properly informed. In general, CPT regards medical screening inadequate (CPT/ Inf (2012) 1, par. 74).
Significant problems arise from the very low staffing levels for several years now of medical personnel (CPT/Inf (2008) 4 par. I, IV; see also Cheliotis, 2012, p.
Sick women, in particular HIV positive, convicted or on remand, are generally sent to the Prison Hospital of Korydallos, where a few rooms are reserved for them, which are never enough. In March 2014 five convicted women with HIV were kept in the prison for convicted women at Thiva in a separate ward because there are no places left for them in Prison Hospital.
The Federation of Correctional Officers noted in March 2013 that sick women are in a more disadvantaged position than men. In 2013, for
12,500 prisoners, there were 100 seats/beds in Prisoners’ Hospital and approximately 230 in the Mental Hospital, all for men. For 700 women, not even one. Therefore, they suggest that merging the two facilities (General and Psychiatric Hospital), at least temporarily, will improve the situation, will save costs regarding personnel, space and there will be more beds available for use by women (Y.E.F.K.K, 2013).
According to media and correctional staff press releases, the contemporary situation of the Prisoner’s hospital is doleful due to the health aggravation of inmates (336 hospitalised male inmates, of whom 60% are HIV positive patients), tremendous staff shortages and financial cuts (Prison Employees Union of Alikarnassos, 2014). It is rather hopeless expecting that the situation will be improved under the present economic conditions with the
A variety of medical doctors (paediatrician included) visit both female prisons once or twice every week, while a dentist has regular hours daily. There are four nurses, one in Thiva for convicted and three in Korydallos for detainees (March 2014) and nursing duties are performed by a number of prison officers and a couple of inmates as in men’s prisons. The prison in Thiva has two psychologists (2014) for approx. 400 prisoners (January 2014: 371; March 2014: 409), while Korydallos prison has three psychologists for
CPT’s delegation in its 2011 visit at both prisons, Korydallos Women’s Remand Prison and Thiva Prison, noticed that the situation had hardly improved since their 2009 visit, and health care services are unable to meet the basic health care needs of prisoners (CPT/Inf (2012) 1 par. 68, 70, 71). This is true because of the constant inflow of foreigners with low standards of health, which the ministries are striving to control.
As for the medical staff, CPT highlighted the lack of coordination and consultation among them, particularly at the facility of female detainees (CPT/Inf (2012) 1, par. 71) and recommended in each prison a senior doctor or nurse manager to be appointed as the head of health care, with responsibility for managing the
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health care service and ensuring there is a regular consultation process among the staff.
Regarding prison deaths, data for only a few years are made available to us by the Ministry of Justice. These data
3.3.4.Safety and security in prison
Prison Law, Constitution, international and European conventions provide specific protection of all prisoners concerning punishment for violations of discipline and prison order. Prisoners’ fundamental human rights are directly enforceable
through the domestic courts. Moreover, the prisoners as all citizens have a right of complaint
to an international judicial body (see above 4.1).
The enforcement of prison sentences, the protection of prisoners’ rights and the supervision of prison operation rests with the public prosecutor of the court in the area of which each institution is located (MD 58819/2003). The public prosecutor is also responsible for the complaints and the appeals against disciplinary sanctions imposed on prisoners, as well as other duties assigned to him/her by the Prison Law and other laws (GPPC, Art. 572). Two
Apart from the public prosecutor who supervise the penal institution, prisons as public services run also under the responsibility of the Independent Agency, the national Ombudsman (Constitution, Art. 103[9]).
In 2002 the Inspectors Controllers Body of Prisons (or: Monitoring and Control Body, SEEKK−Law 3090) was created and is composed of a retired judge and public servants (Law 3090/2002, Art. 3[3]) having the special task of making regular and unannounced visits for controlling prisons’ conditions, order and transparency in the operation of the institutions (Art. 3[2]). After twelve years, there is no published report of them, but just few information about their activities in General Inspector’s of Public Administration report (GIPA 2012/2013).
Another form of social control in Greece is traditionally exercised by the Bar Associations, local charitable, communal, social organisations, human rights groups and some NGOs.
Violation of discipline (GCC, Art. 68) and the corresponding sanctions (GCC, Art. 69) are a sensitive issue of prison life. There are three types of violations of discipline and respective sanctions foreseen in Prison Law. Solitary confinement up to ten days may be imposed only to Type A violations, i.e. violent and/or organised absconding, physical assaults on fellow mate(s) or on personnel, bribery of prison personnel, drug trafficking, cultivation, possession or use of illegal drugs or alcohol, rape, destruction of prison property. A Disciplinary board operates in all correctional institutions and is concerned with the disciplinary proceedings in cases of disorder and riots and the following of prison rules (GPPC, Arts. 70[1], 71[2]).
Whenever a prisoner is to be placed in solitary confinement (isolation punishment), a physician is asked to check beforehand that s/he is fit to sustain such punishment. The Correctional Code (alias Prison Law) also foresees that in such situations a physician has to check the health of the person every day (GCC, Arts. 21[3], 69[1a]). Since physicians are not any time available, but once or twice a week depending on their specialty, such control is carried out by any available member of the health staff. The decision for solitary confinement rests with the Prison board (GCC, Art. 10[1]) which has to take into account the situation of the detainee or the prisoner.
There are no complaints about maltreatment in solitary confinement which, as far as we know, is rarely used and in particular to women. Furthermore, female prisoners that have ever
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applied to the European Court of Human Rights for violation of their rights, it was almost exclusively for excessive length of the criminal proceedings brought against them or inadequate remedy by the Greek state (ECHR, Arts 6[1], 13).11
A sensitive issue in prison is frisking, strip naked and body cavity searches which are
carried out only by staff of the same sex (at least two persons). In general, searches are carried out after prisoners return from furloughs, are transferred from another prison or upon incarceration. Strip searches may be necessary on occasions to ensure prison security or prevent disorder or crime, meaning that the prisoner will not necessarily be strip searched upon admission to prison; s/he can be searched upon reasonable suspicion of involvement in a crime, including of hiding contraband, such as drugs or mobiles ¬‒ for example in her/his alimentary canal. Urine testing and analysis is also carried out upon admission. Prison law foresees that each search must be conducted in an appropriate manner keeping in mind the person’s dignity (GCC, Art. 23 [6]).
Similarly, manual internal inspection of body cavities, takes place only if there exists a plausible reason to suspect the presence of contraband and the order of the prosecutor (GCC, Art. 23 [6]). Visual searches upon entering prison are defined as regular searches, belonging to the routine control, while irregular searches take place every day in different places (e.g. cells, yard, workshops) selected by the chief warden, inside the prison or outside the building(s).
All searches have proven ineffective in the prevention of smuggling objects mostly drugs and has become normal since the mid 2000s to isolate individuals in the reception unit (a monitored environment) until they pass excretia. The prisoner’s stay in an isolation unit is
11.For example, ECtHR 2 July 2009, Chuwunonso v. Greece (no. 43407/06), Ekonomi v. Greece (no. 39870/06), Sarantidou v. Greece (no. 2002/07).
Prison directors and senior prison officers have identified reception as the most problematic area for managing drugs entering the prison.
The legality of naked search, visual and manual body cavity searches is frequently contested by inmates and human rights activists, because these searches are highly invasive and greatly compromise an individual’s right of privacy. In Greece is also criticized by them the use of laxative means for drug control.
In its 2006 report, CPT characterised body cavity searches of female prisoners when they left prison (e.g. to court or to hospital) and on their return as “disproportionate” and noted that examinations of this nature “should be conducted exceptionally on the basis of a risk assessment, not systematically” (cf. CPT/Inf (2006) 41, par. 81).
In 2007, the Ministry of Justice during parliamentary control questions on the issue stated that drug detection of prisoners returning from maternity leave, from the courts and upon entering is extremely difficult, because the prisoners introduce substances mostly in bodily cavities, so that they cannot be detected by existing tracking devices (Division of Parliamentary Control, 2007).
In February 2009, the Greek Ombudsman submitted a memo on “isolation and control practices of incoming prisoners, detainees
or convicts for violating drug legislation” to the parliamentary watchdog Committee on the prison system and the living conditions of prisoners (Ombudsman, 2009, p. 6). Since 2009,
gynaecological examination has stopped. The delegation of CPT was similarly concerned with “the systematic practice of giving all new arrivals laxatives, placing them in the isolation unit for five days and monitoring their use of the toilets by video camera, and recommended the end of this practice” (CPT/Inf (2006) 41, par. 81). However, CPT itself underlined in 2011 that “drugs appeared to be accessible and many prisoners admitted openly to using them” (CPT/ Inf (2012) 1 par. 75; see also CPT/Inf (2006) 41, par. 114, 115; CPT/Inf (2010) 33, par. 138, 139). Drugs – import, exchange and use, are an extremely severe problem faced by prisons’ administration. Apart from drugs, there are a lot of items (e.g. duplicate handcuff keys, cigar tubes to hide money, intravenous syringes, and knives)
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that are concealed in body cavities as well. These goods are considered valuable inside a prison and can pose a security risk to staff and inmates. The control of contraband leaving human dignity absolutely inviolable makes authorities running on a cutting edge.
An emerging technology enhances body scans by identifying metallic and organic materials. In March 2011,
Intelligence gathering and analysis are used to record incidents and information arising from within the prison system. However, there is no official record system in whatever form for the storage of information obtained from prisoners regarding other prisoners and staff, obtained from staff about prisoners, visitors etc. Therefore much information becomes lost and inapplicable after some time.
The person entering the prison meets the social service and the chief of the security staff (correctional officer), and declares if there is any reason to be protected, if s/he has any problem with other prisoners, or whether s/he is associated with some of them (MD 58819/2003, Art. 10[6]). Both, social service and the chief of the security staff, and occasionally the director (GCC, Art. 24), inform the newcomers about the prison regulation. In cases that prisoners due
to nationality, religion or similar reasons have certain accommodation preferences, these are taken into account as much as possible.
In general, especially vulnerable groups of prisoners are kept separated in small units of the prison facilities in order to be protected (e.g. trans- and homosexuals; those accused of sex offences, and of offences against children; former policemen or other former law enforcement officials etc., see PD 141/1991, Art. 144[13]). Despite the very low number of cases, such protection is enabled for women too and regular separate accommodation is provided whenever the circumstances call for it. In March 2014 two such women on remand were detained in Thiva for protection.
“Suicidal” prisoners of both genders are usually placed in small units of the prison too, without having contact with the majority of other prisoners, but they are not left alone in the cell. Psychiatric treatment by the psychiatrists and surveillance by the prison staff and their fellow mates are the common prevention measures used for them. Psychological support is also offered by the five specialists working in the two women prison facilities, who belong to the permanent prison personnel.
There are also certain groups such as terrorists and “dangerous” criminals who are held in special units of prisons and single cells. In July 2009 a new Law (3772, Art. 20[1]) introduced prison establishments of high security (type C), for prisoners serving life sentences or long sentences over ten years and are considered to be especially dangerous for the smooth life in prison. These were not to have any contact with the prisoners of other types (A and B) of facilities. In type A are housed
In the same month, July 2009, the first C unit started operating in a closed prison (MD 103920/2009; see also MD 98257/2009). A violation of furlough (absconding from prison) and disappearance of a convicted terrorist in January 2014, as well as a violation of release on bail of a suspected terrorist in February 2014, apart from the previous two in 2012 (one woman)
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referred to above (4.1), have accelerated the operation of a whole type C facility (Domokos prison) by the Ministry of Justice in August 2014, despite criticism from a few professionals, political groups and several prisoners (MD 65116/2014; MD 88741/2014). Eight months later, in April 2015, the new government abolished the relevant laws and this type of prisons (Law 4322/27.04.2015, Art. 1[1]).
Three young women, all over 22 years of age, accused for terrorism were held in the female prisons between 2012 and 2015. One has been released in September 2015 due to the completion of the minimum of her
3.3.5.Contact with the outside world Inmates enjoy certain rights deriving from
Prison Law in order to maintain their contacts with the free society and the bonds with their family (GCC, Art. 51[2]). They are permitted to have contacts with their family and relatives up to the fourth grade (GCC, Art. 52[1]). They have also the right to be visited at least twice per week. The maximum number of visits is regulated by the Prison board. Usually, those accused or convicted for misdemeanours can be visited up to three times weekly, while those for felonies once per week for at least thirty minutes and can have limitless visits from their defence attorneys (GCC, Art. 52[1]; MD 58819/2003, Art. 21[1,2]). Visits from other persons need the permission of the Prison board, which informs the Minister of Justice; within three days the Minister grants or rejects the application (GCC, Art. 52[2]). This procedure is usually followed for visits that, according to the board, are considered to exercise an undesirable influence on the prisoner/ detainee, such as when the visitor is either involved in the detainee’s/prisoner’s criminal case, or is a former prisoner or endangers the security or the psychological health of the woman, in particular violent family members.
The visits take place in the Visitor room of the prison under only visual control, while for mothers the visits of spouses and especially children are regulated favourably and are to be made in a appropriately arranged space (cf. BkR, 2,
law. In the women’s prison, only children under the age of 16 can communicate with their mothers without the separating glass, but without close physical contact. Especially for school children, there are visiting hours on Sunday morning during the school year to see their mothers. In addition, social workers can arrange for the visit to be in their office, if they consider that there are special reasons for mothers and children to come in closer physical contact, such as when children come for the first time to the prison.
For terrorists, “dangerous” criminals etc. who are subject to special conditions apply the general rules and rights of the Prison law, unless certain visits are considered by the Prison board to exercise an undesirable influence on the prisoner. If both members of the couple are in prison and, in particular, if they are characterised as dangerous, they may visit each other under the same procedure as the rest of the people but in such case after the approval of both prisons boards (Furlough Granting Board/Disciplinary Board); during the visit they sit behind a plexiglas window under visual control.
Foreign prisoners are allowed to contact with diplomatic and consulate representatives of their country of origin, as well as with other persons and organisations that could help the arrangement of problems relating to their prison accommodation (MD 58819/2003, Art. 21[13]).
All prisoners, irrespective of their legal status, can make unlimited phone calls paying
themselves from the phone boxes of the institution, unless the Prison board set restrictions because of certain violations by them (GCC, Art. 53). Nevertheless, prison life and overpopulation sets by itself boundaries to which the prisoners adjust. The use of mobiles is forbidden, but some are skilful enough to possess one.
They can also send and receive letters without limit (Art. 53); censorship is forbidden by the Constitution (Art. 19; also GGC, Art. 53[4]), though permitted for reasons of investigating serious crimes or for reasons of national security (Law 2225/1994, Art. 3). The letters are electronically controlled and opened with the presence of the prisoner/detainee (MD 58819/2003, Art. 23[5]).
Furloughs (GCC, Art. 54) (home leave scheme) are an essential institution for mitigating
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the deprivation of liberty. There are three forms of furloughs: regular, special and educational (GCC, Arts. 55, 57, 58 correspondingly). Regular furloughs intend to alleviate the pains of imprisonment and prepare social
The granting of furloughs started not only carefully but also very tentatively in 1989 (Spinellis & Spinellis, 1999, p. 49). After the first experimental time, successive changes
The eligibility criteria for regular furloughs are: a) The prisoner should have served 1/5 of the imposed sentence (real time and not beneficial counting because of work or education) and at least three months of it. However, in cases of life imprisonment the convicts should have served at least 8 years, while juveniles should have served 1/3 of the imposed minimum period of their custodial sentence (this sentence is quasi indeterminate and the court sets a minimum and maximum period); b) a penal prosecution for a felony should not be pending against the convicted person; c) the Furlough Granting Board estimates whether there is a risk or not of either escape or commitment of offences (GCC, Art. 55[1])(Cheliotis, 2006).
Prisoners who wish to follow an education course outside the prison or complete their primary or secondary education, as well as their vocational (technical, occupational) training may be granted an educational furlough. As a prerequisite the law sets only the assessment of the eventual positive influence which the education and training will have for the reintegration of the prisoner in society, as well as on his/her personality (GCC, Art. 58[1]). Some more details are also foreseen for the trainee by the Furlough board concerning the educational programme, e.g. the educational institution to be
attended, days and hours of absence from prison, eventual escort etc. (GCC, Art. 58[2]). The prison administration grants to those on leave some financial support in order to meet their expenses.
Prisoners can always appeal for violation of their rights to communication, restrictions of vocational and educational training, furloughs and disciplinary sanctions to the court responsible for their sentence enforcement, namely the court of the larger area where prison is located (Law 2225/1994, Arts. 3,4,5; GCC, Arts. 52[3], 53[7]). However, especially about the furloughs, the pre- trial detainees can be granted a furlough only in extraordinary cases and unforeseen events affecting them, such as death, funeral and serious health problems of a close family member (GCC, Art. 57[2]).
3.3.6.Rehabilitation of female prisoners and aftercare
Educational, recreational activities or vocational training as well as participation in groups (counselling) for drug addicts, and work in prison are provided exclusively on a voluntary basis (Art. 22[4]; cf. ECHR 1950/53, Art. 4[3a]).
The expanded possibilities for conditional release make prisoners less inclined to choose the work option (of either offering services in the prison as janitors, cooks etc., or in the fields, for the men: agrarian/rural institutions) as a means of gaining a quicker release (GCC, Art. 46[2]). Although working programmes and vocational activities operate in all prisons, the places due to the overcrowding are not enough, while old and successful workshops were reduced. Additionally, the costs for recreational activities subsidised by the state have drastically decreased. Regarding these activities, the operation of a prison blog as an
The most common occupations in prison with beneficial calculation are related to the daily operation of the prison and are mainly ancillary. The women work in the kitchen, the warehouses, the washing rooms, the garden, the library, the coffee shop, the pharmacy of the prison, etc. Work opportunities in ancillary services of the prison are also granted by the Prison Labour Board,
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which takes into account specific skills of the prisoner, confidentiality, type of offense (which, for example, may prevent the employment of a prisoner convicted for drug crimes to work in the pharmacy), etc. Apart from the jobs mentioned above, a different type of occupation in women’s prisons is manufacturing handicrafts. Many women are engaged in knitting, and embroidery. For some women these are occupations they had experience with before their incarceration, and for others, they acquired these skills during their incarceration. They have the option of selling their handicrafts and making a profit or maintaining the activity as a hobby (Thanopoulou et al., 1997, p. 146). However, these activities can be regarded as discriminatory against women according to CPT (CPT/Inf (2000) 13, par. 25).
The main productive occupation of the incarcerated women is the carpet workshop, the jewellery (faux bijoux) – and the paintings workshop (K.K.G.E.TH.). All of the objects are sold outside the prison in annual exhibitions and the inmates are paid for the creations sold. Training for carpet making lasts at least three months and is designed for prisoners serving long sentences, while the jewellery workshop is designed only for drug addicts and is operated by KETHEA. A professional painter employed by the Ministry of Justice teaches prisoners in the painting workshop to paint pictures and other objects.12 The carpet workshop has been operating since 1969 and the other two since 1995.
Many courses have been periodically carried out in the women’s prisons, most of them recreational activities, e.g. flower binding, theatre, gymnastics, and volleyball without providing beneficiary calculation of the sentence or any reimbursement as the previous productive workshops. After 1995, the cofinanced programmes of the EU and the Greek state started offering vocational training and support, or other
The main educational programmes running in prisons for many years are the “second chance”
12.She retired in March 2014 and now a fellow prisoner teaches the other women.
school (since 2005), the Greek language course, and the high school distant learning course. The first is a
These women can join the respective program of the Ministry of Education. Prison Law allows correspondence studies (distant learning) in universities and technical universities wherever available, as well; few prisoners attend a public university course or vocational (technical, occupational) training outside the prison under the framework of educational furloughs from time to time. In 2010 a young female prisoner passed the general examinations for higher education and achieved the third highest place in the Athens Law
School, while in 2013 four young males passed the examinations (Psaraki, 2011; Naftemporiki, 2013).
Several women after release face employment problems, such as reconnecting with their workplace or their previous customers and distrust of employers, while the rest lack
Two studies examined the opportunities for reintegration for (adult male and) female offenders on release from prison, and for juvenile offenders. Both enquiries attempted to evaluate the training programmes provided for these groups. The first study examined the difficulties encountered in integrating or reintegrating women into work, pending their release (Thanopoulou et al., 1997). It found that the problems of integration into the world of work had started long before imprisonment, and that deprivation of liberty intensified these problems and made them more acute. The authors then
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examined the 16 institutions charged with the education and training of released prisoners by interviewing representatives from each of the organizations. This study emphasized the importance of aftercare treatment and the need for further support programmes as well.
The second study related to the aftercare training programmes followed 56 adults and 11 juveniles, who had taken part in one of four occupational training programmes, after their release from prison (Thanopoulou & Moschovou, 1998). Only six of the adults and one of the juveniles were female. The majority of both groups were working after release in the same sector as before their confinement, usually in unskilled or temporary jobs. This implies that their training had played no role. Therefore, the authors emphasized the need for better programme planning and aftercare.
The two surveys confirmed that the expressed state interest in helping prisoners to reintegrate into society is not associated with effective measures for their support either in correctional facilities or after release. Particularly, assistance from state institutions offering social relief to vulnerable population groups, such as Societies for the aftercare of prisoners or for the protection of juveniles, has declined. These societies were envisaged for 63 regions of Greece, under the auspices of Courts of First Instance. They were originally responsible to the Ministry of Justice, but in 1997 (Law 2503) they were transferred to local government. Up to that time, only 33 of them had submitted annual budgets and presented reports (of varying degrees of usefulness) and 30 had been totally inactive.
The Prison Law 2776/1999 (GCC, Art. 81[2,3]) foresees a combination of the previous systems, involving
from various disciplines (law, psychology, sociology, criminology) working part time within a very low budget. Therefore, apart from counselling services, EPANODOS can hardly offer material resources. In general, it informs and facilitates the access of released prisoners to other services, while the participation of prison authorities despite their efforts and engagement in implementing comprehensive pre- and
Other institutions involved in education programmes in prison as well as in
3)the Greek Orthodox Church (Archdiocese). The local parishes of the Church participate in after care initiatives offering small financial allowance, short accommodation, clothing, food, addiction support, help for abused and battered women, family counselling. Some NGOs offer short term housing, food and counselling services too; and few Universities through the Social Fund of the EU have offered in the past vocational training and support (Spinellis & Spinellis 1999, pp.
3.3.7.Prison staff
The largest number of prison personnel is custodial and administration staff (85%), while specialised personnel, i.e. psychologists, criminologists, sociologists, social workers and teachers do not exceed ten percent (CPT/Inf (2012) 1, par. 64; CPT/Inf (2010) 33, par. 119).
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In spite of the regular employment of custodial staff until 2010, the numbers are never enough because a considerable number is pensioned or leave the office, seconded to another service, escort inmates to court, hospital etc., while there is a constant increase in the prison population. Yet the staffing of correctional officers is sufficient for both women’s prisons. In March 2014, 81 correctional officers were working at the Thiva Prison for convicted women (March 2014, ratio- 1 guard: 5 prisoners) and 190 at Korydallos (March 2014, ratio- approx. 1:1!) for remand prisoners.
During the last decade, prison officers are elementarily trained to address the special needs of women, including health care needs, psychological support, maternal needs, as well as the protection of women due to the higher need being in service in order to confront overcrowding.
Although previous Prison Laws (140/1967, 1851/1989) foresaw a training period of four, and then subsequently six, months upon first joining the prison service, four months practice and refresher or educational courses every two years (GCC, Art 120[1]), the initial training has been reduced, since 1999, to two months of theoretical courses, and the rest practice in prison (Arfaras, 2011, pp.
The staff shortages of specialised personnel that can support prison officers along with the constant danger of being liable for whatever
problems arise in the prison produce pessimistic and negative feelings among the staff, which are aggravated to a further degree by the absence of their psychological support.
In March 2014 apart from the five psychologists who have being working in the two female prisons (3 in Korydallos/remand, 2 in Thiva/convicted), the rest of the specialised personnel consisted of 11 social workers (10 in Korydallos and 2 in Thiva) and only one sociologist (in Korydallos Remand prison). The research of Mitrossyli and Fronimou refer that in 2006, when there was only one prison for women (559), three social workers for the prisoners had been working, which meant a rate of 186 prisoners per social worker (!). Except for counselling and preparation of social and reintegration of prisoners, social workers also had to deal with administrative duties and paper work as well (Mitrossyli & Fronimou, 2006, p. 32; Thanopoulou et al., 1997, p. 54).
CPT’s delegations in their reports have noticed the expanding defeatist feelings of the personnel (CPT/Inf (2006) 41, par. 75; CPT/ Inf (2010) 33, par. 89) and the stress because of the overpopulation and the limited training that impede them to the development of adequate measures in order to address prison problems (violence, dearth of staff etc.) (CPT/Inf (2006) 41, paras. 83, 123, 125).
As several experts have often stressed in the past, as well as the CPT from its side, prison authorities have the responsibility to protect prisoners. In particular, prison staff must be alert to signs of trouble and be both resolved and properly trained to intervene. Although this depends on an adequate staff/prisoner ratio, it requires also training throughout the careers of the correctional officers (CPT/Inf (2006) 41, par. 83). But above all, it requires from the authorities invest adequate resources not only in recruitment but also in training. A skilled staff is able to deal with prisoners in a decent and humane way, paying in parallel attention to issues of security and good order. This will influence the development of constructive and positive relations between prison staff and prisoners reducing the risk of
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CONCLUSIONS AND OPEN ISSUES
In Greece, as in most countries, the proportion of women in official crime rates and prison population is generally low with an increasing trend since the 1990s. This can be associated with the more intensive female participation in economic, professional and social life which, however, had already begun in the 1970s. Furthermore, the higher level of consumerism and greed associated with inadequate means for covering the perceived needs cannot also be ignored. The impact of globalisation and the practically open borders also play a role.
Women seem to have slightly higher rates in crimes at younger ages
As for the prison regime and living conditions of female prisons, the main problems are the unequal division of personnel in the two prisons examined, the chronic understaffing of specialised and healthcare personnel and the inadequate operation of training and education programmes for the female inmates.
Special emphasis should be given to the HIV prevention treatment and care, as well as to the preventive health care education and information of prisoners (BkR, 14, 17) and in particular the information of prisoners by the admission staff relative to the dangers of denying health screens, including for sexually transmitted diseases or
Despite the long existing drug sensitisation, mobilisation and rehabilitation programmes for female prisoners, a unit for detoxification of substance abusers should be added to the existing unit for males (BkR, 15). Incarcerated women are at a higher disadvantage than incarcerated men in regards to health care and residential drug treatment. Moreover, the explicit demand of BkR for the determination of health care needs of the sexually abused or of those who have suffered other forms of violence prior to admission must be taken into account (BkR, 6[e]).
Although prison authorities use classification and individualisation methods for gender- sensitive risk assessment, appropriate treatment and reintegration into society, this process is carried out rather empirically (BkR, 40, 41). Similarly, the prisons’ cooperation with aftercare organisations is insufficient (BkR, 46, 47).
The Greek penal system foresees and provides several possibilities for those convicted and serving short sentences not to be imprisoned and it is especially generous to young females, and mothers with toddlers. As far as juveniles are concerned, the operation of a special department for females is not a solution, because it would be soon filled following the development of the young males’ institutions. The use of alternatives to imprisonment for female offenders and a mechanism for their supervision, as well as a small team of professionals working with the young females in prison are necessary instead. It is quite disappointing that female prisoners are also not included in the pilot project for electronically monitoring 250
The poor training of correctional officers, along with general and special security issues that arise is a serious problem for the smooth management of all prisons. Clear policies and regulations on the conduct of prison staff and
Correctional officers and administrators in today’s correctional facilities face new and old challenges that increasingly make it difficult to keep peace inside prison walls. It seems that the greatest challenge is the prevalence of narcotics in the prison setting. An increasing amount of those imprisoned are there because of
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correctional facilities may be disastrous for the already overcrowded prison system in Greece (see also Hood, 2009; CPT (2010) 33, par. 123).
Loose and humanitarian prison management is a good model, which must be associated with training, professionalism, accountability and ensuring
technology, and adequate staff training in order to improve their
Finally, crime prevention must be added to the subject matter of the already operating drug prevention programmes of the local governments along with the mobilisation of community experts visiting and counselling the students in schools. Greece still has the ability to organise and promote an “early warning system” in order to control an increase in women offenders and prisoners (BkR, 67) before the problem gets out of hand.
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•Naftemporiki (2013, October 17). Praise from the MinisterofJusticetotheyoungmalesattheJuvenile Institution of Avlona for their success on the higher educationexaminations(http://www.naftemporiki.
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•Papadamakis, A. (2004). Is it necessary for the accused to be detained in order to apply for the revocation or replacement of his remand?’ Consultation. Armenopoulos 58,
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Technology (http://www.govtech.com/
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•Psaraki, G. (2011, February 11). Report on 2010 Activities of Women’s Prison at Thiva, Eleonas. Athens:MinistryofJustice(http://sociologyalert. blogspot.gr/2011/03/2010.html).*
•Spinellis, D. & Spinellis, C.D. (1999). Greece: Criminal justice systems in Europe and North America. Helsinki: HEUNI.
•Thanopoulou, M., Fronimou, E. & Tsilimingaki, V. (1997). Women pending release: The right of reintegration into the work force. Athens, Komotini: A.N. Sakkoulas.*
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•Thanopoulou, M. & Moschovou, V. (1998). Education and training of released prisoners and juvenile offenders: Research into training programmes. Athens: General Secretariat for Adult Education.*
•The Lawyer’s Tribune/To vima tou dikigorou (2009, August- September). Lawyers’ news, 8 (77), 10 (http:// documents.scribd.com.s3.amazonaws.com/ docs/5yaup2ekhs1obbvc.pdf).*
•US Department of
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•Y.E.F.K.K/Service of External Prison Guards. Claims framework 2013 (http://www.osye. org.gr/Dplaisio.php).*
Decrees*
•MD/Ministerial Decree 58819/07.04.2003. Internal Regulation of General Detention Establishments Type A and B. Athens: Government’s Gazette/GG B463.
•MD 98257/27.07.2009. Transform of a part of Domokos prison to unit type C. Athens: GG
Β1525.
•MD 103920/28.07.2009. Partial Conversion of Grevena Detention Facility from A to C type. Athens: GG B1544.
•MD 65116/01.08.2014. Convert of the General Detention Facility of Domokos from B to C type. Athens: GG B2198.
•MD 88741/23.12.2014. Internal Regulation of Detention Establishments and
•PD/Presidential Decree 148/10.08.2007. Codification of national legislation on drugs, Athens: GG A191.
•PD 141/30.04.1991. Competencies and administrative actions of the personnel of the Ministry of Public Order and issues referring to the organization of the service. Athens: GG A58.
•PD 300/05.11.2003. Establishment and operation of private legal entity with the name
EPANODOS (re: Aftercare). Athens: GG Α256.
*References with asterisk* are in Greek language and their titles are translated into English.
(All internet sources have been retrieved in April 2016)
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