Ireland’s prisons ‘on edge of overcrowding’. Gazette.ie is the daily legal news site of the Law Society of Ireland

Fred Bassett's avatarPosted by

06 Jun 2024 / justice Print

Ireland’s prisons ‘on edge of overcrowding’

An annual report on Europe’s prisons has described overcrowding as “an acute and persistent problem’ in a significant number of European prison administrations.

According to the Council of Europe, Ireland is “on the edge” of overcrowding, with a prison density of 99 inmates per 100 places available in the year from 31 January 2022 to 31 January 2023.

The ‘SPACE’ report on penal statistics, compiled by the University of Lausanne, shows that the overall density figure for the 48 European countries covered rose to 93.5 from 91.7 in the previous year.

Seven countries recorded figures above 105, indicating “severe overcrowding”.

‘Significant’ rise in Ireland

Ireland was one of 16 countries described as recording a “significant” increase in its prison population over the year, with the number of people held rising by 12%.

The figures show that, while Ireland recorded one of the biggest increases in its incarceration rate (11.7%) over the year, its overall rate of 85 inmates per 100,000 inhabitants remained one of the lowest in Europe.

Ireland’s prisons held 4,432 people by the end of January 2023 – just under 5% were women and 14.6% were foreign inmates.

The report shows that 20.6% of inmate in Irish prisons had not yet received a final prison sentence.

The suicide rate in Irish prisons, at 2.3%, is well below the European median, but the rate of escapes (4.5%) is among the highest.

COVID effect?

The figures show that only 5% of inmates across Europe were women, while the figure for foreign inmates was 27%.

Drug-related offences continued to be the most common main conviction among Europe’s prisoners, accounting for 18.5% of the prison population, followed by homicide or attempted homicide (12.8%), and theft (11.5%).

Prof Marcelo Aebi, who heads the University of Lausanne’s SPACE research team, noted that the overall European prison population rate rose slightly for the second consecutive year.

“This could still be a bounce-back effect from the reduction experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic years, due to the drop in offline crimes during the lockdowns, the release of prisoners in some countries, and a decrease in the activity of the criminal-justice systems,” he said.

“However, this increase contrasts starkly with the overall strong downward trend in incarceration rates since 2013,” Prof Aebi noted.

Share this article

facebook sharing buttonlinkedin sharing button

Gazette Desk

Gazette.ie is the daily legal news site of the Law Society of Ireland


< Read more stories

Latest top stories

07 Jun 2024 – 14:00

British judges resign from Hong Kong court

Lord Collins cites ‘political situation’ in territory

global news

07 Jun 2024 – 12:00

Addleshaw Goddard plans new Dublin office

Firm records 45% Irish growth since 2022 merger

business

07 Jun 2024 – 10:00

RDJ takes lead on law firm culture change

Stress won’t end but coping skills can be honed

wellbeing

07 Jun 2024 – 10:00

Speakers named for Hardiman Lecture Series

Legal journalism and Oliver Wendell Holmes on agenda

courts

07 Jun 2024 – 10:00

MHC highlights barriers to green procurement

Limited supplier options main issue, survey finds

environment

07 Jun 2024 – 08:00

Cork event to focus on attracting talent

How to keep trainees and newly qualified solicitors

law society

Related to justice

justice

Legal Aid Board’s 34th centre opens in Ballymun

justice

justice

Applications open for community-safety fund

justice

law society

Pro Bono Week this year runs from 10-14 June

law society

justice

Ireland’s prisons ‘on edge of overcrowding’

justice

Leave a comment