Categories: Views

Lord Timpson and the Push to Rethink Women’s Imprisonment: The Women’s Justice Board

The launch of the Women’s Justice Board on 21 January 2025 marks a significant moment in rethinking how the UK treats women in the criminal justice system. Campaigners have stressed that women’s offending is often rooted in trauma, domestic abuse, poverty and addiction. Prisons rarely address these issues and often deepen the harm.

Chaired by Prisons Minister Lord Timpson, the Board brings together senior figures from government, research and the voluntary sector. Its mission is to reduce the number of women in prison, expand community-based alternatives, and prioritise those facing the greatest vulnerabilities, including pregnant women, young adults and women of colour. With more than 3,600 women currently in custody, plans to move hundreds into rehabilitation and treatment settings could even allow the closure of at least one women’s prison.

The need for change is urgent: four in five women in prison have a history of significant head injury, most linked to domestic violence, and one in three self-harmed last year. More than half are mothers.

But the Board has faced immediate criticism for excluding women with lived experience—an omission charities warn risks policy blind spots.

The Women’s Justice Board signals real momentum. Now its credibility depends on centring the voices of women who know the system first-hand.

Read Keisha Clarke’s full article on The View 15 here The View Magazine Issue 15 Autumn 2025 Digital Edition – The View – for women with conviction

Opinion article by The View.

The View Magazine

Recent Posts

Women in Prison and the Mental Health Crisis: When Custody Replaces Care

by Aarchi Mewara MSc International Criminology and Criminal Justice, Cardiff University  Whilst women in prison are a…

20 hours ago

Issue 17 of The View is here

The View Magazine Launches Issue 17 Focused on Abolition.London, UK–31st March 2026, The View Magazine,…

21 hours ago

From Prison to Parliament: Charlie Herd’s Fight for ADHD Awareness in the Justice System

In 2021, Charlie Herd was sentenced to three and a half years in prison for…

3 days ago

A Tragedy of Incompetence: The Inquest into Claire Dupree’s Preventable Death at HMP Eastwood Park

The harrowing details currently emerging from the ongoing inquest at Avon Coroner's Court into the…

4 days ago

Why The Pink Pill Matters

At a moment when women’s health and bodily autonomy are under assault in law and…

5 days ago

The True Cost of Irresponsible Journalism: Why Media Accountability Matters More Than Ever

The recent findings from the Press Recognition Panel’s (PRP) 10th Annual Report confirm what many…

6 days ago

This website uses cookies.