Human rights and the invisible nature of incarcerated women in post-apartheid South Africa: prison system progress in adopting the Bangkok Rules.

IF 1.1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Marie Claire Van Hout, Jakkie Wessels
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: The global spotlight is increasingly shone on the situation of women in the male-dominated prison environment. Africa has observed a 24% increase in its female prison population in the past decade. This year is the 10-year anniversary of the United Nations Rules for the Treatment of Women Prisoners and Non-custodial Measures for Women Offenders (the Bangkok Rules) adopted by the General Assembly on 21 December 2010.

Design/methodology/approach: Using a legal realist approach, this paper examines South Africa's progress in adopting the Bangkok Rules. This paper documents the historical evolution of the penal system since colonial times, focused on the development of recognition, protection and promotion of human rights of prisoners and an assessment of incarcerated women's situation over time.

Findings: The analysis of the human rights treaties, the non-binding international and regional human rights instruments, African court and domestic jurisprudence and extant academic and policy-based literature is cognizant of the evolutionary nature of racial socio-political dimensions in South Africa, and the indeterminate nature of application of historical/existing domestic laws, policies and standards of care when evaluated against the rule of law.

Originality/value: To date, there has been no legal realist assessment of the situation of women in South Africa's prisons. This paper incorporates race and gendered intersectionality and move beyond hetero-normative ideologies of incarcerated women and the prohibition of discrimination in South African rights assurance. The authors acknowledge State policy-making processes, and they argue for substantive equality of all women deprived of their liberty in South Africa.

人权与种族隔离后南非被监禁妇女的隐形性质:监狱系统在通过《曼谷规则》方面的进展
目的在男性占主导地位的监狱环境中,女性的处境越来越受到全球关注。在过去十年中,非洲女性监狱人口增加了24%。今年是大会2010年12月21日通过的《联合国女性囚犯待遇和女性罪犯非拘禁措施规则》(《曼谷规则》)10周年。本文记录了殖民时代以来刑罚制度的历史演变,重点是承认、保护和促进囚犯人权的发展,以及对被监禁妇女长期处境的评估。结论对人权条约、不具约束力的国际和区域人权文书、非洲法院和国内判例以及现有的学术和政策文献的分析认识到南非种族社会政治层面的演变性质,以及历史/现有国内法适用的不确定性,根据法治评估时的政策和护理标准。独创性/价值迄今为止,还没有对南非监狱中妇女的状况进行法律现实主义评估。本文结合了种族和性别的交叉性,超越了被监禁妇女的非规范意识形态,并在南非的权利保障中禁止歧视。提交人承认国家政策制定过程,并主张南非所有被剥夺自由的妇女享有实质性平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Prisoner Health
International Journal of Prisoner Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
21.40%
发文量
56
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