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Listening to Their Voices: Women Prisoners and Access to Justice in ManitobaDebra L. ParkesUniversity of Manitoba - Faculty of Law Kathy Bentaffiliation not provided to SSRN Tracey Peteraffiliation not provided to SSRN Tracy Boothaffiliation not provided to SSRN 2008 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, Vol. 26, No. 1, p. 85, 2008 Abstract: The existing research into effective accountability and oversight of Canadian prisons has considered the situation of federally sentenced prisoners (that is, those serving sentences of two years or more) and has raised serious questions about their ability to access justice in the sense of having adequate and accessible means to ensure that their treatment and conditions of confinement are just and in compliance with the law. Relatively little is known about the state of oversight and legal review processes at the provincial level, where jail terms are short and prisoners’ rights litigation is rare. This paper attempts to begin filling that gap in knowledge by examining the situation faced by women imprisoned in provincial jails in Manitoba. The paper first surveys the existing international and domestic laws concerning prisoners rights and avenues for redress in Manitoba, before moving on to consider why and how those mechanisms are utilized or not, by listening to the voices of women who have been incarcerated recently at the Portage Correctional Centre. Finally, the paper considers what legislative or policy changes might be made to provide access to justice for provincial prisoners, drawing on recommendations and insights from the women themselves.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 35 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: April 21, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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