A new report reveals the challenges mothers face trying to maintain a relationship with their children whilst in prison, and recommends additional support.
Dr Kate O’Brien and Dr Hannah King, from our Sociology department, evaluated the pioneering Parental Rights in Prison (PRiP) project.
The PRiP project aimed to help incarcerated parents sustain a relationship with their children.
The project provided specialist family support workers as well as legal advice and support.
It was run by the charity NEPACS and was piloted at HMP Low Newton women’s prison, Durham, before expanding to two men’s establishments in the region.
The evaluation found that the PRiP project was often the first-time incarcerated mothers received specialist family support and legal advocacy around their parental rights.
Having a child/children removed often triggered self-medication, suicidal ideas and self-injury amongst mothers. This was especially the case early on in custody, and as mothers were approaching release.
PRiP helped to overcome issues of mothers being misinformed or given little/no information about the legal status of their children, or their parental rights.
The researchers make several recommendations for the Ministry of Justice and His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service.
These include:
The evaluation report also suggests further research should look at the needs of Black and racially minoritised mothers in custody.
Dr O’Brien is working with NEPACs on ways to implement the recommendations from her report and is writing a book on parental rights in prison.
As part of the PRiP project, mothers also worked with a theatre company, Open Clasp, to produce a performance called ‘Rupture’, based on their experiences. The project team has also secured additional funding to tour the performance, and film it. Their aim is to share the performance widely with prison staff and legal practitioners to help them understand the challenges faced by mothers in prison.