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Too many women are being remanded into custody

The Canary by The Canary
10 April 2026
in News, UK
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The use of remand (holding a person in custody before trial or sentencing) is at its highest level in over 50 years. Today, one in four women in prison are being held on remand. Women on remand are less likely than men to be granted bail, and racially minoritised and migrant women are significantly overrepresented in the remand population.

Court delays mean women can wait months in detention, sometimes longer, without knowing their future. Even a short period in custody can lead to a woman losing her job, housing and care of her children.

A briefing by the Howard League for Penal Reform noted that for women remanded by magistrates:

almost two-thirds … go on to be found not guilty or do not receive an immediate custodial sentence.

A new key findings paper by the chief inspector of prisons reinforces the scale of the problem. People on remand now make up 19% of the total adult prison population. Suicide is more common among this group and the report also found that 67% of people on remand report mental health difficulties.

Together with six other women-led organisations working for justice, Women in Prison has formed The Remand Collective. The other organisations are:

  • Hibiscus Initiatives.
  • The Howard League for Penal Reform.
  • Clean Break.
  • Birth Companions.
  • One Small Thing.
  • Not Beyond Redemption.

This is a bold new partnership committed to ending the unjust, unsafe and unfair use of remand for women. Together, we are calling for fewer women to be imprisoned whilst awaiting trial or sentencing, and for alternatives that are based in care, safety and trust.

One woman involved in the Remand Collective highlights its importance:

I’ve never been asked what I need to feel safe – only told what’s expected of me. This space was different.

Change is possible and it starts by listening to women and investing in alternatives that keep women safe while upholding justice and dignity.

Featured image via the Canary

Tags: justice
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Comments 2

  1. Airlane1979 says:
    2 months ago

    Change is possible and it starts by listening to men and women and investing in alternatives that keep men and women safe while upholding justice and dignity. Given that studies from numerous countries including the UK show that women, when being sentenced by male judges, are given more lenient punishments for similar crimes, it is indeed likely that women on remand “go on to be found not guilty or do not receive an immediate custodial sentence”. That is not a reason for treating working class men more harshly.

    Reply
  2. Helen Waine says:
    2 months ago

    Many men and women have been abandoned by the mental health services and sorry, but ‘care in the community’ is a cynical misnomer. Here’s is how it works – consultant psychiatrists assess those with serious mental health problems, recommend medication and on-going treatment. Then a group of social workers and CPNs override the decision of psychiatrist. Because it is an easier option for them to allow the ‘hard to deal with’ cases to be thrown in prison when they are put on dangerous medication without supervision, or simply deprived of access to services they need. Legislation is needed to stop this happenings. Social workers and CPN and ‘nurses’ should be compelled to implement psychiatrists recommendations. CPNs will recommend arrests when they attend incidents with the police. Sir Mark Rowley and other senior officers have tried to highlight this abuse of police resources and the inappropriateness of jail for people who should be cared for by the NHS.

    Reply

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